The Book of Awe: Wandering and Rewilding
The Book of Awe: Wandering and Rewilding is a 40-page softcover publication filled with stunning naturescape photographs from Iceland, Ireland, New York City and the Catskills.
The text explores the conjunction of open awareness and meditative flow states in an ongoing collaboration with awakened wonder, which inspires passion for protecting and collaborating with the natural world.
Awe is a song we hear, listening to barred owls, vireos and larks, remembering that birds taught human beings how to sing.
Wonder becomes a window to a recovered kinship with the backwoods, a slowed-down opportunity to access science-based curiosity once embodied in childhood. The inquisitive merging of science and artmaking defines an ongoing rewilding of empathetic interest in seasonal shifts, animal tracks, bird songs, and habitat details of our ecosystems.
The Book of Awe: Wandering and Rewilding is a 40-page softcover publication filled with stunning naturescape photographs from Iceland, Ireland, New York City and the Catskills.
The text explores the conjunction of open awareness and meditative flow states in an ongoing collaboration with awakened wonder, which inspires passion for protecting and collaborating with the natural world.
Awe is a song we hear, listening to barred owls, vireos and larks, remembering that birds taught human beings how to sing.
Wonder becomes a window to a recovered kinship with the backwoods, a slowed-down opportunity to access science-based curiosity once embodied in childhood. The inquisitive merging of science and artmaking defines an ongoing rewilding of empathetic interest in seasonal shifts, animal tracks, bird songs, and habitat details of our ecosystems.
The Book of Awe: Wandering and Rewilding is a 40-page softcover publication filled with stunning naturescape photographs from Iceland, Ireland, New York City and the Catskills.
The text explores the conjunction of open awareness and meditative flow states in an ongoing collaboration with awakened wonder, which inspires passion for protecting and collaborating with the natural world.
Awe is a song we hear, listening to barred owls, vireos and larks, remembering that birds taught human beings how to sing.
Wonder becomes a window to a recovered kinship with the backwoods, a slowed-down opportunity to access science-based curiosity once embodied in childhood. The inquisitive merging of science and artmaking defines an ongoing rewilding of empathetic interest in seasonal shifts, animal tracks, bird songs, and habitat details of our ecosystems.