Contemporary environmental crises and revival of spiritual practices have triggered multidisciplinary responses globally. In art education, contemporary female artists increasingly combine ecological consciousness with inner spiritual experiences, using painting as a medium to explore empathetic relationships between self, body, and nature. This study examines how contemporary female artists express ecological and spiritual themes through visual symbolism, analyses the educational potential of ecofeminist art in promoting environmental awareness and explores the social implications of integrating spiritual and ecological consciousness in artistic expression. Through qualitative analysis that combines thematic and visual analysis, this research investigates representative paintings by Gaia Orion and Verena Wild as case studies, examining how their artistic language carries ecological and spiritual meanings. Specifically, this study addresses the gap in understanding how ecofeminist art functions as an alternative pedagogical tool, as this intersection has remained underexplored in art-based pedagogy. The analysis reveals that these works use the female body, natural elements, and cyclical symbols as core visual strategies, responding to ecofeminist critiques of cultural-natural dualism while embodying the integrated "nature-body-sacred" worldview found in feminist theology. The research findings indicate that these artworks serve not only as expressions of personal transformation but also constitute a visual pathway for ecological ethics and feminist subjectivity reconstruction. Through symbolic imagery, sensory composition, and intuitive colour use, they establish an artistic discourse that transcends traditional logic, providing new theoretical reference and aesthetic dimensions for understanding the integration of ecology and consciousness in contemporary female art.
Li et al. (Sun,) studied this question.