Pamela Moulton is a Maine-based artist and environmental activist. Her multi-disciplinary wearable sculptures and installations built from salvaged commercial nets and ropes (“ghost gear”) are highly interactive, exploratory, and thought-provoking. Moulton invites the public to explore its environmental consciousness in a direct, material way, pulling visitors into evocative, sensory, and contemplative spaces. Her work aims to target specific climate issues including endangered seagrass meadows, warming waters, rising sea levels, and sinking lighthouses.

Moulton’s work has been shown internationally at Chapelle d’Aniane, France; National Gallery of Art, Tirana, Albania; Katonah Museum, NY; Portland Museum of Art, ME, and Ogunquit Museum of American Art, ME. Recent works include installations at Arcadia Earth Museum in Las Vegas, a TEMPOarts public art commission in Portland, ME, the Maine Maritime Museum, and the 2023 Biennial at Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Rockland, ME. She has received fellowships and grants from the Maine Arts Commission, TEMPOarts Maine, USM Percent for Art Commission, Kindling Fund, New England Foundation for the Arts, and Conseil Regional in Central France. Moulton holds a BA from the University of Vermont, an MFA from Ecole Superieure d’Art-Aix, France, and has studied dance pedagogy at IUFM Blois, France.