The intersection of science, sustainability, and artistic expression will take center stage at Worlds Collide Trinidad as Trinidadian artist Erin Krogh brings her environmentally inspired body of work to the upcoming exhibition.
Krogh’s art exists in a space where ecological awareness and visual storytelling collide. While those close to her may describe her as modest and reserved, her work speaks with a completely different energy — bold, expressive, and impossible to ignore.
Her pieces are characterized by striking visuals and layered emotion, often reflecting the tension between industrial development and environmental preservation. It’s a perspective shaped not only by creativity, but by lived professional experience.
Outside of the art world, Krogh works as a Project and Executive Officer within the environmental sector, where she is actively involved in areas such as organic waste management, quarry reforestation, and carbon project development. Those scientific and sustainability-driven experiences directly influence the themes embedded throughout her artwork, giving her pieces both emotional weight and intellectual depth.
“I have a big appreciation for nature and not only feel the need to protect it through my work but also portray it in my art,” Krogh shared when speaking about the relationship between her environmental career and creative practice.

That balance between logic and emotion has become central to her artistic identity. Through texture, colour, and conceptual storytelling, Krogh transforms environmental conversations into visual experiences, inviting audiences to see nature as more than a resource, but as something deeply personal and worth preserving.
Her participation in Worlds Collide Trinidad represents another layer of the exhibition’s evolving identity — one rooted in cultural fusion, modern creativity, and multidisciplinary storytelling.
Set to bring together visual art, music, fashion, and immersive experiences, the exhibition continues to position itself as a platform for artists whose work exists beyond traditional boundaries. For Krogh, it also marks a defining opportunity to showcase how science and art can coexist in powerful and meaningful ways.
As Worlds Collide Trinidad approaches, audiences can expect Krogh’s contribution to stand as both a visual statement and a quiet call for reflection on humanity’s relationship with the natural world.

