Explore Nature on Colossal https://www.thisiscolossal.com/category/nature/ The best of art, craft, and visual culture since 2010. Tue, 20 May 2025 15:15:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/icon-crow-150x150.png Explore Nature on Colossal https://www.thisiscolossal.com/category/nature/ 32 32 Blurring Boundaries’ ‘Maativan’ Farmhouse Embraces Biophilic Design in an Indian Forest https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/blurring-boundaries-maativan/ Tue, 20 May 2025 18:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455622 Blurring Boundaries’ ‘Maativan’ Farmhouse Embraces Biophilic Design in an Indian ForestSurrounded by forest, the farmhouse is constructed from mud, lime, recycled objects, and other natural materials.

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In Blurring Boundaries’ newest project, a woodland area in Wada, Maharashtra, India, and a serene architectural oasis converge in a remarkable farmhouse. The Mumbai-based firm (previously) conceived of a sanctuary called “Maativan,” cradled by trees in a feat of biophilic design, which is constructed from natural materials to create a synergy between interior and exterior experiences.

Undulating beamed ceilings, open-air spaces, an organic layout, and plenty of ventilation allow for ample natural light, airflow, and heat control. With sustainability at the forefront of its mission, Blurring Boundaries incorporated mud, lime, bamboo, stone, wood, recycled bottles, wheels, glass, and other repurposed substances into the home’s framework.

the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors

“Maativan’s commitment to sustainability, cultural authenticity, and ecological responsibility is evident in every aspect of its construction and operation, making it a true sanctuary for those seeking a deeper connection with the natural world,” the studio says. Find more on its website.

the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with a wall made of repurposed wagon wheels
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors
the interior of a biophilic residential design, with wood-beamed ceilings, organic walls, and earthy floors

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The Brilliant Milky Way Connects Photographers Around the Globe and Beyond in an Annual Contest https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/milky-way-photographer-2025/ Mon, 19 May 2025 20:10:48 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455544 The Brilliant Milky Way Connects Photographers Around the Globe and Beyond in an Annual ContestStunning in its own right, our galaxy is ever more dazzling in the images topping the 2025 Milky Way Photographer of the Year contest.

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Each night, the Milky Way decorates darkened skies around the globe with a streak of glimmering stars and pink-orange dust. Stunning in its own right, our galaxy is ever more dazzling in the images topping the 2025 Milky Way Photographer of the Year contest.

The annual competition, hosted by Capture the Atlas, received more than 6,000 submissions in its eighth year. Winning shots are each from a different location, including amid the moai sculptures of Easter Island, atop Taiwan’s Hehuan Mountain, and Yemen’s remote Socotra Island. For the first time, there’s even a view of the Milky Way from aboard the International Space Station, which astronaut Don Pettit captured while Earth glitters below.

the milky way over easter island
Rositsa Dimitrova, “The Night Guardians,” Easter Island, Chile

While diverse in geography, approach, and technique, all of the photos are guided by the brilliant band of light in the distance. See all 25 winners on Capture the Atlas.

the milky way shot through baobab trees
Benjamin Barakat, “Bottle Tree Paradise,” Socotra, Yemen
a path leads to a pointed stone under the milky way
Marcin Rosadziński, “Stairway to Heaven,” Madeira Island, Portugal
a view of the milky way from space with earth below
Don Pettit, “One in a Billion,” International Space Station
the milky way above a rocky sea cove
Kavan Chay, “Evolution of Stars,” Otago, New Zealand
a person stands in a striped stone landscape with a light underneath the milky way
Luis Cajete, “The Wave,” Coyote Buttes, Utah, U.S.
the milky way above a field of pink and purple floewrs
Max Inwood, “A Sea of Lupines,” Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
lush pink flowers in a valley underneath the milky way
Ethan Su, “Blosoom,” Hehuan Mountain Dark Sky Park, Taiwan
the milky way seen through a rock arch
Anthony Lopez, “A Stellar View From The Cave,” Saint Raphael, France

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Among Newly Discovered Ocean Species, a Baby Colossal Squid Is Filmed for the First Time https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/schmidt-ocean-institute-new-species-colossal-squid/ Fri, 16 May 2025 14:24:08 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455432 Among Newly Discovered Ocean Species, a Baby Colossal Squid Is Filmed for the First TimeA 35-day trek to the South Sandwich Islands led to remarkable new discoveries.

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An archipelago in the South Atlantic known as the South Sandwich Islands is home to some of the most remote landmasses in the world. Uninhabited except for occasional scientific research, their volcanic makeup highlights the geological and ecological diversity of this part of the world, and we still have much to learn.

Schmidt Ocean Institute (previously) recently completed a 35-day trek on the Falkor (too) to the remote island chain and discovered new hydrothermal vents, coral gardens, and what researchers suspect to be entirely new species. During this expedition, the team also confirmed the sighting of a juvenile colossal squid, capturing one on film for the first time.

“Colossal squid are estimated to grow up to 23 feet in length and can weigh as much as 1,100 pounds, making them the heaviest invertebrate on the planet,” the institute says, noting the significance of the documentation because the animals have only ever been found dead, after they’ve washed ashore or been eaten by predators.

“Little is known about the colossal squid’s life cycle, but eventually, they lose the see-through appearance of the juveniles,” says a statement. “Dying adults have previously been filmed by fishermen but have never been seen alive at depth.”

This recent expedition forms part of the Nippon Foundation–Nekton Ocean Census program, the largest initiative working to expedite the discovery of ocean life. During the voyage, the team weathered tropical storm-force winds with hurricane-level gusts, 26-foot waves, icebergs, and a subsea earthquake.

Ocean Census scientists focused on discovering new species, documenting corals, sponges, sea urchins, snails, sea stars, and benthic ctenophores—commonly called comb jellies or sea gooseberries. The team will announce the exact number of new species later this year after taxonomic experts verify their findings.

a baby colossal squid
This is the first confirmed live observation of the colossal squid, Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni, in its natural habitat. Photo by ROV SuBastian

“The 35 days at sea were an exciting rollercoaster of scientific discovery, the implications of which will be felt for many years to come as discoveries filter into management action,” says Dr. Michelle Taylor, head of science and expedition principal investigator for the Ocean Census. She adds, “This is exactly why the Ocean Census exists—to accelerate our understanding of ocean life before it’s too late.”

See more on the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s website.

a tiny sea cucumber
A sea cucumber recorded at 649.45 metres at Saunders East, in waters measuring +0.51°C (about 33°F)
a so-called "ping-pong" sponge underwater
A “ping pong” sponge (Chondrocladia sp.) is documented on a seafloor bank west of South Georgia Island
an isopod underwater against a black background
This isopod was found during a dive at 470 metres depth at Saunders East, with a water temperature of +0.54°C (about 33°F)
red corals underwater
A vibrant grouping of coral, documented on Humpback Seamount
a yellow-and-white nudibranch
A nudibranch observed at 268 metres on the eastern side of Montagu Island, where temperatures hovered at +0.35°C (about 32.6°F)
a red, deep-sea starfish
A Brisingid — a type of deep-sea starfish — perches on a ledge among many brittle stars (ophiuroids) at a site east of Saunders Island
marine basket stars underwater
Basket stars, a type of echinoderm, are abundant on seamounts and rocky outcroppings; ROV pilots recorded this observation at 673 meters during a dive on a bank west of South Georgia Island
a crustacean crawling along a branch or coral of some kind
A crustacean from the Antarcturidae family found at 331.61 metres at Saunders East, where the temperature measured +0.5°C (about 33°F), seen here perched on a sea pen
a research vessel sails in subantarctic waters near a snowy, steaming volcanic island
Research Vessel Falkor (too) conducts studies off the South Sandwich Islands, including a site close to Montagu Island. The South Sandwich Islands area is extremely active volcanically

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Among Newly Discovered Ocean Species, a Baby Colossal Squid Is Filmed for the First Time appeared first on Colossal.

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Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/ana-brecevic-plasticum/ Wed, 14 May 2025 16:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455292 Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages"I live along the Atlantic coast, where I collect marine waste that inspires and feeds into this body of work," Brecevic says.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Recycled Materials Draw Attention to Ocean Plastics in Ana Brecevic’s Assemblages appeared first on Colossal.

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As the climate crisis worsens around the globe, its effects are no more apparent than in our oceans and the communities that rely on them. Delicate coral reefs, for example, face stresses from not only rising sea temperatures but the residue of human presence—plastics, castoff fishing equipment, and other waste.

Warm water is typically the culprit in coral bleaching events, characterized by algae leaving the organisms and turning them a ghostly white. The algae provides a food source and helps to protect the coral from disease, but when it goes, the host is left much more vulnerable. For Ana Brecevic (previously), this phenomenon inspires work that draws attention to this urgent issue.

cut white material, draping off the edge of a wooden table, in the shape of coral

Her recent series, Plasticum, reflects on the ever-growing problem of plastic pollution in the earth’s oceans while contrasting the beauty of marine ecosystems with their vulnerability to human impact. The artist meticulously cuts silhouettes of bleached corals and gorgonians—also known as sea fans—and ornaments them with baubles reminiscent of debris.

“I live along the Atlantic coast, where I collect marine waste that inspires and feeds into this body of work,” Brecevic says. “Everything is made from recycled paper, upcycled fabrics, and natural dyes.”

The artist describes Plasticum as “a quiet echo of a reality slowly settling in,” where microplastics and waste continually threaten underwater habitats and biodiversity. She says, “Through this work, I hope to spark questions about our connection to living ecosystems and what we choose to see—or overlook.”

Find more on Brecevic’s website and Instagram.

a framed artwork made of cut material in the shape of coral
Photo by Marion Saupin
a framed artwork made of cut material in the shape of coral
a detail of a framed artwork made of cut material in the shape of coral
a framed artwork made of cut material in the shape of coral
a detail of a framed artwork made of cut material in the shape of coral
Photo by Marion Saupin
a detail of an artist's hands working on cut material in the shape of coral
Photo by Marion Saupin
a detail of an abstract, dark blue, textured sculpture

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In His New Book, Photographer Zed Nelson Lifts the Veil on ‘The Anthropocene Illusion’ https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/zed-nelson-the-anthropocene-illusion/ Tue, 13 May 2025 16:00:00 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455160 In His New Book, Photographer Zed Nelson Lifts the Veil on ‘The Anthropocene Illusion’"While we destroy the natural world around us, we have become masters of a stage-managed, artificial ‘experience’ of nature—a reassuring spectacle, an illusion," Nelson says.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article In His New Book, Photographer Zed Nelson Lifts the Veil on ‘The Anthropocene Illusion’ appeared first on Colossal.

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In the 1985 film Out of Africa starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford, a picturesque scene highlights the pair on a romantic picnic high above the sweeping Masai Mara National Reserve. Today, tourists are invited to recreate the iconic moment in a colonial-inspired, hillside champagne picnic experience for which “local Masaai tribesman are employed to provide picturesque authenticity to the experience,” photographer Zed Nelson says.

In his new book, The Anthropocene Illusion, Nelson takes us on a global journey that lifts the veil, so to speak, on what we think of as “wilderness” and our progressively uneasy relationship with the environment. “While we destroy the natural world around us, we have become masters of a stage-managed, artificial ‘experience’ of nature—a reassuring spectacle, an illusion,” he says.

a spread of a photography book with an image on the right showing urban architecture almost completely covered in vines

The Anthropocene defines the ever-evolving, rapid changes to the environment due to humans’ unyielding impact. Many scientists place the epoch’s origin during the Industrial Revolution, but some consider 1945—the year humans tested the atomic bomb—to be the true beginning. Yet others suggest that the Anthropocene was initiated even earlier, during the advent of agriculture.

At that point, we entered into an increasingly uneasy relationship with the natural world, relying on ever-more extractive processes, heavy manufacturing, plastics, and advancing technology—all of which depend on the earth’s resources. Our societies’ colonialist tendencies also apply to nature just as much as other human-occupied territories.

We’re depleting entire aquifurs, forever altering the composition of the land, and irretrievably damaging delicate ecosystems. All the while, Nelson shows, we subscribe to a nostalgic view of untamed wilderness while at the same time expecting it to mold to our lifestyles.

In Kenyan national parks like Masai Mara, wildlife is provided sanctuary, “but the animals living within them are allowed to survive essentially for human entertainment and reassurance,” Nelson says. “These animals become, in effect, performers for paying tourists eager to see a nostalgic picture book image of the natural world.”

a man stands beside a giant snow cannon throwing artificial snow in a snowy mountain scene
Snow cannon producing artificial snow at Val Gardena ski resort, Dolomites, Italy

Nelson’s illuminating series taps into the absurdities of the illusion that nature is still thriving as it once was. Artificial snow shot from a cannon in the Italian Dolomites, for example, nods to warmer winters. A result of the climate crisis, leading to little snow, the powder is manufactured so holidaymakers can ski.

From vine-draped brutalist buildings to overcrowded national park lookouts to half-tame lions walked out like entertainers during a safari, he shares moments that feel skewed and incongruous, indicating looming and ultimately inescapable problems behind the veneer.

The Anthropocene Illusion series took first place in the professional category of the 2025 Sony World Photography Awards, and the book, which comes out this month, is available for pre-order in the Guest Editions shop. Ten percent of profits will be donated to Friends of the Earth, an environmental justice nonprofit. See more on Nelson’s Instagram.

a spread of a photography book with an image on the right showing colorful coral underwater
a man stands on a dirt road next to two lions that have stopped for a drink in a couple of puddles
‘Walk with Lions’ tourist experience, South Africa
a spread of a photography book with an image on the right showing a group of tourists looking out over a mountain vista
the cover of a book titled 'The Anthropocene Illusion' by Zed Nelson with an image of a very green willow tree

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article In His New Book, Photographer Zed Nelson Lifts the Veil on ‘The Anthropocene Illusion’ appeared first on Colossal.

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Gregory Euclide Explores the Anthropocene in Verdant Mixed-Media Collages https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/gregory-euclide-assembled-lands/ Mon, 12 May 2025 13:34:01 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=455081 Gregory Euclide Explores the Anthropocene in Verdant Mixed-Media CollagesEuclide’s mixed-media collages investigate nature through the lens of human experience.

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Smeared, flattened, and rough around the edges, Gregory Euclide’s mixed-media collages explore nature through the lens of human experience. Organically meandering outlines suggest shallow reliefs; foraged prairie botanicals complement human-made materials; and abstracted landscapes emerge from drawings, photographs, ripped paper, paint, and more.

“The artist tears and layers these elements to build a new pictorial space which more accurately resembles the way he takes in the land,” says a gallery statement for Assembled Lands, Euclide’s solo exhibition opening later this week with Hashimoto Contemporary.

“Torn: Double Sun” (2025)

Breaking down his observations of nature into its fundamental parts, Euclide merges overviews of trees, shrubs, meadows, and the horizon with the intimate details of leaves or branches. One might approach his subject matter through the lens of the Anthropocene, which describes our present era of accelerating changes to the environment due to humans’ unrelenting impact.

Each collage (previously) merges recognizable forms and terrain with abstract shapes and compositional spirals or whorls. The effect toys with perception and our understanding of relationships between flatness and depth, land and sky, and nature and ourselves.

Assembled Lands runs from May 17 to June 14 in New York City. See more on the artist’s website.

“Washed Up On The Beach 2” (2025)
“Plat Map” (2025)
“Torn: Silhouette” (2025)
“Random Invader Memory” (2025)
“Torn Landscape Spun” (2025)
“Torn: Forest Silhouette” (2025)

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An Uncanny Postcard Fit for the Era of Climate Catastrophe https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/an-uncanny-postcard-fit-for-the-era-of-climate-catastrophe/ Wed, 07 May 2025 22:07:51 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=454904 An Uncanny Postcard Fit for the Era of Climate CatastropheMist or smog? A postcard helps track the not-so-bright days.

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Depending on the day, you might look to the sky and see a sea of pale blue or a radiant sunset creeping toward the horizon. If you’re in a major metropolitan area, though, you might also be met with the characteristic red-brown haze of smog.

Berlin-based artist Macarena Ruiz-Tagle is behind the vibrant Cyanometer and Sunset postcards we’ve featured on Colossal (and that have sold out in our shop several times). But she also created a third version designed for those not-so-bright days.

a white hand holding up a postcard to the sky
Tiananmen Square, Beijing (November 2013). Photo by Macarena Ruiz-Tagle

The World Health Organization estimates that 99 percent of people on Earth breathe unsafe air, making Ruiz-Tagle’s Air Pollution postcard perhaps the most fitting for our era of climate catastrophe. While a stark contrast to the brilliant blues, yellows, and oranges of the other two, this design is awash in pale pinks and grays to match that of a gloomy, and even soiled, atmosphere. Like the others, the idea is to hold the work up to the sky and mark the corresponding hue before dropping it in the mail.

The interactive card shifts in meaning depending on whether the opening reveals a misty fog or air thick with chemicals, and it’s part of a growing movement to track climate data in a tangible, grassroots manner. “Separating the visual delight of being immersed in a cloud from the intoxicating reality of breathing heavily polluted air, the postcard evokes both the smog that engulfs global cities and the ethereal beauty of fog,” the artist writes. “In its mesmerizing aesthetic ambiguity, the work sustains a space for contemplation within our troubled atmosphere.”

Find all three postcards in the Colossal Shop, and explore more of Ruiz-Tagle’s work on her website.

a postcard with a hole in the middle
Air Pollution postcard

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Since 1981, One Man Has Relocated Nearly 1,000 Snowy Owls from Logan Airport https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/05/the-snowy-owls-of-logan-airport/ Fri, 02 May 2025 19:53:32 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=454695 Since 1981, One Man Has Relocated Nearly 1,000 Snowy Owls from Logan AirportNorman Smith has single-handedly relocated hundreds of animals and helped to implement humane bird management programs at airports around the U.S.

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Upwards of 17 million commercial flights ferry passengers across U.S. airspace each year. (It’s more than twice that, in total, worldwide.) Those hundreds of thousands of vessels share the sky with winged things that have been around way, way longer than airliners, but it’s not always an easy relationship. Through the work of people like Norman Smith at Boston’s primary international terminal, we’re learning more every day about a remarkable species and their evolving ways of life.

The Snowy Owls of Logan Airport” is a short documentary about Smith’s extraordinary work managing unexpected avian residents. Created by Anna Miller, who also runs The Animalia Podcast, the film highlights the unique migration patterns of the largest owls in North America and why they flock from the Arctic to such an unlikely destination every winter.

Smith has been working with snowy owls at Logan Airport since 1981. “They fly 3,000 miles just to get here,” he says. “We don’t know why they come down to the Boston area. Logan Airport has the highest concentration of snowy owls in the Northeast that we know of.”

The birds’ choice to land at a busy transportation hub might not be as surprising as you’d think at first. It comprises 1,800 acres of open fields, which resemble something like the tundra they call home farther north, full of rats and mice to eat. And on three sides, water provides another ample source of food. It might be loud, but they don’t seem to lose a wink.

Programs like the one at Logan Airport have been in place for decades following tragic incidents in which jet engines ingested birds, causing the planes to crash. One particular event in 1960 in Boston prompted airports around the nation to implement programs that managed bird populations, especially roosting areas, around active airfields. And while shooting avian species has historically been one method of removal, Smith is committed to a much more humane solution: moving them to safety elsewhere.

Snowy owls are considered “vulnerable” to extinction, and their populations are dwindling as the effects of the climate crisis continue to impact habitats in the Arctic. While it’s harder to predict what will happen in the coming years, Smith is dedicated to giving the birds he encounters the best chance of survival.

So far, he has single-handedly relocated more than 900 animals, been instrumental in implementing similar programs across the U.S., and hopes his passion for conservation and the urgent need to save these incredible creatures will influence future generations to do the same. (via Kottke)

a still from a short documentary showing an airplane in the background of an airfield with a snowy owl on the ground in the foreground
two snowy owls sit on a beach fence

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Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’ https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/04/carly-glovinski-almanac/ Thu, 24 Apr 2025 14:56:06 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=454157 Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’Glovinsky channels literary reflections on communing with nature.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’ appeared first on Colossal.

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“Gardening gives one back a sense of proportion about everything—except itself,” author May Sarton (1912-1995) wrote in her book Plant Dreaming Deep (1968), a journal about discovering a love of tending to the land. For Carly Glovinski (previously), the sentiment incidentally frames something of a raison d’être for the artist’s remarkable large-scale floral installation at MASS MoCA.

Glovinski was especially moved by Sarton’s book The House by the Sea (1977), which traces the author’s move from New Hampshire to the seacoast of Maine. The vibrancy of gardens spurred the artist’s fascination with flowers, culminating recently in an expansive work titled “Almanac.”

a segment of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall

Celebrating the diversity and dynamism of blooms, the piece explores ideas around placemaking and the passage of time. “For Glovinski, the garden is a metaphor for collapsed time and perishable memories,” says an exhibition statement. Along with Sarton, the artist also draws on poet Emily Dickinson’s love for plants, channeling literary reflections on connecting with the simple pleasures—and sublime chaos—of nature.

“Almanac” takes its name from the annual guide that forecasts weather and a provides calendars for astronomical events, tides, and planting. The piece took more than a year to complete and comprises hundreds of pressed flower paintings made with washy acrylic paint applied to both sides of semi-transparent mylar. The gestural brushstrokes on translucent material evoke a sense of lightness and delicacy, like real petals blown up to larger-than-life size. Above the installation, she’s labeled segments with the months the blooms appear.

Glovinski references pressed blossoms that she has grown, harvested, or collected from friends, nodding to Emily Dickinson’s love of the practice. (The poet created a stunning herbarium containing 424 specimens collected around her home in Amherst, Massachusetts.) “By observing, tending, and preserving flowers, ‘Almanac’ becomes both a visual record of the seasons and a commentary on the labor of care,” the museum says.

See more on Glovinski’s website and Instagram.

a detail of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall
a detail of a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along a white wall
a large, full-wall installation of numerous flower painting cutouts that resemble giant pressed flowers all along white walls
a hand holds a large painted cutout of a flower, in front of numerous others already installed on a wall, to show a realistic rendering of a large-scale yellow bloom that looks pressed

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Hundreds of Huge Flowers Spring Forth in Carly Glovinski’s Monumental ‘Almanac’ appeared first on Colossal.

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A Stunning Image of the Australian Desert Illuminates the Growing Problem of Satellite Pollution https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/04/joshua-rozells-light-pollution/ Fri, 18 Apr 2025 16:34:56 +0000 https://www.thisiscolossal.com/?p=453876 A Stunning Image of the Australian Desert Illuminates the Growing Problem of Satellite PollutionStitching together 343 distinct photos, Joshua Rozells illuminates a growing problem.

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In January 2021, Joshua Rozells ventured out into the Pinnacles Desert in Western Australia, intending to photograph a star trail. But after shooting for more than three hours and reviewing his images, he realized that the light patterns he captured weren’t what he had hoped for.

“There were satellite trails visible in almost every single photo,” he wrote on Instagram. “Instead of trying to get rid of them for a star trail, I decided to put the satellite trails together into a single image to show how polluted the night sky is becoming.”

Stitching together 343 distinct photos, Rozells illuminates a growing problem. When Elon Musk’s SpaceX launched Starlink in 2019, 60 satellites filled the skies, with a race from other companies to follow. That number has now topped 10,000, with tens of thousands more in the works. SpaceX alone plans to launch 40,000 more.

Rozells’ composite visually echoes pleas from astronomers, who warn that although satellites collect essential data, the staggering amount filling our skies will only worsen light pollution and our ability to study what lies beyond. Because this industry has little regulation, the problem could go unchecked.

“Thankfully, astronomers across the globe have taken notice of this growing issue and are starting to speak up,” Rozells adds. “Organisations such as the International Astronomical Union’s Center for the Protection of the Dark and Quiet Sky are advocating for the regulation and protection of the night sky.” (via Kottke)

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