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Share my vision, and be reminded that we are all stewards of our Anthropocene Landscape. Feel even better that 10% of Profits will be donated to Earthjustice- protectors of the land! Thank you for your support!
**Please understand that there is some variation within each edition of prints, as they are hand printed by the artist. The prints also have deckled (torn) edges, and can have organic variation in the dimensions and outer shape of the paper.
**PLEASE NOTE: Currently shipping to the USA, lower 48 states, the preparation, handling, and shipping fee has been included in the price. Please contact me in advance if you are in another location (global) to discuss logistics, and customize your order.
About this series:
This group of prints are a part of my ‘Anthropocene Landscape Series’. Printmaking challenges me to instill precision and clarity onto the most fleeting, inexpressible aspect of my landscapes: changes in atmosphere, climate, and violence to the land. The inconsistencies I cause to the plate: scratches, slips, imperfections, give life to the landscape. My faults in the process of manipulating the ink, and the unique surfaces of each piece of paper breathe a bit of chaos, dust, and air into the land.
Representing human encounters with a damaged post-industrial landscape, this body of work draws from concrete realities about our present day earth. Murray Bookchin writes about a split that happened between the Human and Nature, via the transition from Nomadic Life, into Societal Life. Could our environmentally destructive legacy of Pollution, Nature-domination, Environmental-Colonialism, and Neo-Liberalism have been avoidable? How might a person in this alternate timeline survive, and relate to the land? I imagine this parallel story, where engineering, and surviving the harsh elements, is in the hands of a wandering nomad. Although the human figure isn’t present, we see life scenarios through inhabited spaces, and simplistic technologies to interact with the elements. Some mechanisms generate wind-power, hydro-power, or solar, and some are shelters with a duel function of collecting rainwater for plants and drinking. In the structures’ precariousness, and sometimes futility, they reflect on the fragile relationship between humanity and nature.