Category Archives: Featured

Suné Woods: Landscape and Memory

Suné Woods’s photographs challenge American preconceptions about whose bodies “belong” in nature and counter the “common sense” notion of rural geography as simply empty space. Woods began her spatial inquiry after a particular self-portrait elicited a strong reaction from her … Continue reading

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Amy Balkin: Private Ownership, Public Space, and the Commons

Amy Balkin’s work addresses a fundamentally American question: Who owns the land? She’d once envisioned a desert Eden that would belong to all human beings but quickly discovered that there is no legal construct in the United States for a … Continue reading

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Sarah Kanouse: Offering an Alternate Sensory Engagement with Place

  In her fascinating work America Ponds, Sarah Kanouse inhabits a unique version of the character of the explorer. This artist’s version of a naturalist is distinct in that one has “a skewed vision of what that world might be, … Continue reading

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Cynthia Hooper: The Poetics of Infrastructure

Cynthia Hooper’s passion for infrastructure is palpable. She is a self-described “infrastructure geek.” Trained as a painter, Hooper applies a formal aesthetic approach—emphasizing light and color—to her video work. The project we discussed is a collection of videos about water … Continue reading

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Elizabeth Ellsworth & Jamie Kruse: A Warning Sign to Last 10,000 Years

Artists and creative types are often looking for an idea with legs: something that can adapt and evolve to carry forth an enduring theme. With the Marking Deep Time Studio, the legs are everything.   Conceived in 2011 by smudge—a … Continue reading

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The Myth of Preserving “Pure” Nature

In American mythology, the settlement of the West was the story of hardy pioneers scratching out rugged new lives, though in reality, by the time most pioneers arrived, much of the western landscape was owned and developed by agricultural and … Continue reading

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Allison Davies: Landscapes with a Mission

“I needed to find a reason to be in those landscapes, because they have been photographed so many times before that just taking a photograph of them was not enough,” Allison Davies explained as she looked at the mysterious figure … Continue reading

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Is the Drive to Explore Linked to Madness?

In a 2011 issue of the New, Yorker Swedish biologist Svante Pääbo discussed with writer Elizabeth Kolbert the possibility of a gene that might explain why modern humans (as distinct from Neanderthals) began, as he put it, “venturing out on … Continue reading

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Everything Is Alive: Camille Seaman’s Portraits of Ice

Camille Seaman does very little research before taking her journeys—she just goes, usually with no idea of what to expect. Her first trip to “the ice,” as she calls it, was a serendipitous one.   In 1999, she agreed to … Continue reading

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Art Meets Science: Illustrating Deep Time Through Portraits of Nature

Of all the artists’ projects featured in The New Explorers, the one the book begins with, Rachel Sussman’s The Oldest Living Things in the World, is one of the more unusual. For more than a decade, Sussman has traveled all … Continue reading

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