Photographs by Matthew McGlennen
I love the ambiguity of unravel - it can represent destruction, just as it can represent cleansing. It can speak to the unrelenting forces beyond our control, or the simple, deliberate act of undoing.
I love the ambiguity of unravel - it can represent destruction, just as it can represent cleansing. It can speak to the unrelenting forces beyond our control, or the simple, deliberate act of undoing.
On the shoreline, there is a constant battle for sovereignty. These images explore the effects of Hurricane Sandy and reconstruction efforts within the landscape over time.
I remember coming out of the anesthesia, drifting back from wherever it is you go, back to consciousness. I looked at my mother and said “Now, will you tell me why we’re here?”
Nature Nurture Illustration Series by Paula Champagne
Photographs
BIO: Retired children's librarian Alan Bern’s poetry books: No no the saddest and Waterwalking in Berkeley, Fithian Press; greater distance, Lines & Faces, his broadside press with artist Robert Woods, linesandfaces.com. Alan has had poems, stories, and photos published in a wide variety of online and print publications, from which [...]
Reading room based on Jugend | Canon 55mm | On a walk in Orient Point State Park, there were unoccupied seats. Caution tape lining playgrounds. This seat in the forest was symbolic of the time we are in. I transposed a book I held [...]
Ysabella Luikart is a third year Environmental Chemistry major at SUNY ESF. These photographs were created for Anne Godfrey’s LSA 496 class, as part of a final project in which the class tackled current landscape issues and how the future might be impacted. The landscape issue behind this particular set of photos is the human [...]
Our art is focused on exploring the systems and institutions that dominate the popular narratives of nature. In other words, we look at what and who counts as natural and what doesn't. We want to re-examine the language and outlook used to characterize the natural in hopes of making a more fruitful and more just [...]
Allene Nichols lives in Dallas, Texas, where she teaches at Richland College and at the University of Texas at Dallas. She is an avid traveler and always travels with her camera. Her photos have appeared in Lifting the Sky: Southwestern Haiku and Haiga. Her poetry has appeared in many journals [...]