Nature

Ostional Wildlife Reserve

Ostional Wildlife Reserve

A few pictures from our visit to Ostional Wildlife Reserve on a cloudy, overcast afternoon. According to nicoyapeninsula.com: The beach of Ostional is the scenery for a rarely-seen biological wonder. The week before new moon hundreds, and sometimes hundreds of thousand sea turtles come to one specific mile of beach at Ostional to dig their eggs […]

William Wegman, For A Moment He Forgot Where He Was And Jumped Into The Ocean, 1971

William Wegman, For A Moment He Forgot Where He Was And Jumped Into The Ocean, 1971

William Wegman’s solo exhibition “Hello Nature” runs from July 13 to October 21 the Bowdoin College Museum of Art in Maine. (Though this photograph isn’t in the show it’s one of my favorite works by him.) The exhibition features some thirty years of work inspired by Maine, where the artist spends his summers. Read a recent interview […]

Robert Macfarlane, "The Old Ways"

Robert Macfarlane, “The Old Ways”

Between the appearance of my last post and this one, I have traveled from New York to London. I browse bookstores everywhere I visit, but doing so in England offers a special thrill: the ability to purchase (English-language) books not yet published in the United States. In advance of this trip, I’ve had my eye […]


Ellsworth Kelly: Plant Drawings

Ellsworth Kelly: Plant Drawings

One of the foremost artists of our day, Ellsworth Kelly (American, b. 1923) may be best known for his rigorous abstract painting, but he has made figurative drawings throughout his career, creating an extraordinary body of work that now spans six decades. There has never been a major museum exhibition dedicated exclusively to the plant […]

"Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974"

“Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974”

Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974 is the first large-scale, historical-thematic exhibition to deal broadly with Land art, capturing the simultaneous impulse emergent in the 1960s to use the earth as an artistic medium and to locate works in remote sites far from familiar art contexts. Organized by MOCA Senior Curator Philipp Kaiser and […]

Land.

Land.

A short and compelling video about the pre-production of the feature film Land. here! “Taha sets out on an epic 600 km journey along the Moroccan Atlantic coast to Europe—on a windsurfboard. More about the film.


Tantra Song by Franck Andre Jamme

Tantra Song by Franck Andre Jamme

From a recent interview with Franck Andre Jamme for the Paris Review‘s blog: It could be a cult classic: the debut edition of Siglio Press’s Tantra Song one of the only books to survey the elusive tradition of abstract Tantric painting from Rajasthan, India sold out in a swift six weeks. Rendered by hand on found pieces […]

Rebecca Solnit's A Field Guide to Getting Lost

Rebecca Solnit’s A Field Guide to Getting Lost

The world is blue at its edges and in its depths. This blue is the light that got lost. Light at the blue end of the spectrum does not travel the whole distance from the sun to us. It disperses among the molecules of the air, it scatters in water. Water is colorless, shallow water […]

Valérie Buess

Valérie Buess

Swiss-born artist, Valérie Buess, gives old books new life by creating these amazing three-dimensional sculptures that look like sea creatures.


Robert Smithson, Mirror and Crushed Shells

Robert Smithson, Mirror and Crushed Shells

On July 9, 1969 Robert Smithson wrote the following letter to Andy Warhol about Mirror and Crushed Shells: Dear Andy, This is to certify that the Mirror with Crushed Shells (Sanibel Island) is an original work of art. It consists of three mirrors which may be restored if broken, and one burlap bag of crushed shells collected by the artist at Sanibel […]

Maggie Nelson's Bluets

Maggie Nelson’s Bluets

In German, to be blue—blau sein—means to be drunk. Delerium tremens used to be called the “blue devils” (Burns, 1787.) In England “the blue hour” is happy hour at the pub. Joan Mitchell—abstract painter of the first order, American expatriate living on Monet’s property in France, dedicated chromophile and drunk, possessor of a famously nasty tongue, and […]

Skyspace

Skyspace

This is actually my last post on this blog so I’m gonna go out in style with one of my favorite artists, James Turrell. If you still want more awesomeness you can always follow me on twitter @lundhansen.


Sunsets by Ann Woo

Sunsets by Ann Woo

Minimalistic photographs by the Chinese artist Ann Woo. See more of her work at annwoo.com

Into the rainforest

Into the rainforest

A little video I did with Erik Gustafsson and Deborah Moss for a Costa Rican rainforest ecolodge called Lapa Rios.

Tipping Barrels

Tipping Barrels

Follow surfers Arran and Reid Jackson on a trip into the Great Bear Rainforest on the Pacific coast of Canada, one of few untouched forests of the world and an area threatened by the oil industry. Learn more at pacificwild.org


Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Great Pacific Garbage Patch

It’s pretty easy to disconnect from the impact our plastic habit has on the environment. But when you find yourself swimming in floating bits of garbage (as I did last summer in Far Rockaway), or you see an image like the one above, the impact is immediate and unavoidable. To learn more and bring awareness […]

Repositories

Repositories

Costa Rica is known for its holes, and in particular following the rainy season on the roads. I have a fondness for holes and a collection of mounds. These mounds range in material composition, but they tend to be made from organic matter. In composition they are created and range from additive to subtractive processes.

Water, Water Everywhere

Water, Water Everywhere

PHANTOM WATER EDIT on Vimeo. Amazing footage by Australian cinematographer, Chris Bryan.


BARBS DOLED

BARBS DOLED

There are many things that run deep in still waters. In the Pacific, things run even deeper and one is advised when one is spending time in the surf to shuffle their feet as you move across the ocean floor. Adhering to this logic is a purposeful measure against being barbed by a stingray. Rays […]

Murmuration

Murmuration

A shared moment with one of natures greatest and most fleeting phenomena. Watch the video here:

Earth Time Lapse

Earth Time Lapse

Here’s an incredible time lapse made from photographs taken by the crew onboard the International Space Station (ISS) from August to October 2011. Shot from an altitude of around 350 km the earth looks like one big living organism and really puts human civilization in perspective. The video was edited together by Michael König.


A Life Underwater

A Life Underwater

For a lifetime 75 year-old Ray Ives has been collecting artifacts he found on the bottom of the sea while working as a professional diver. Everything from bottles, jars, propellers to swords, guns and gold. “The sea is the biggest rubbish-dump in the world…” he says.

Postcard from the Farm

Postcard from the Farm

Greetings from the farm in Garza, Costa Rica where it is hot and humid. We’ve officially returned to the Nicoya Peninsula for the winter season where we were blown away by these beautiful plants: fresh ginger (gingibra in Spanish) from the huerta (garden) in Garza! That ginger goes into making a vodka infusion (see below) […]

Nautilus News

Nautilus News

“A horrendous slaughter is going on out here,” said Peter D. Ward, a biologist from the University of Washington, during a recent census of the marine creature in the Philippines. “They’re nearly wiped out. The culprit? Growing sales of jewelry and ornaments derived from the lustrous shell. To satisfy the worldwide demand, fishermen have been […]