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Interview with Maja Daniels: Gertrud, Natural Phenomena, and Alternative Timelines
© Maja Daniels
“In 1667, a 12-year-old girl, Gertrud Svensdotter, was accused of walking on water in Älvdalen, Sweden.
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Interview with Dylan Hausthor: What the Rain Might Bring
© Dylan Hausthor
“I was recently visiting my hometown and stopped to fill up my car with gas.
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Interview with Owen McCarter and Drew Leventhal: “The Three-Eyed Fish” and Independent Photo Book Publishing
© Owen McCarter
“The Three-Eyed Fish”, by Owen McCarter, is an allegorical journey along the Housatonic River in Western Massachusetts and a search for the pollution caused
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“notes from a body inverted” by Emme Rovins – Exhibition at Gravedigger’s Daughter
© Emme Rovins
Modern day modes of botanical taxonomy are still based on a system that focused attention on the organs of generation within plants, “unleash[ing] onto the public imaginat
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Jake Nemirovsky: Big Bug
© Jake Nemirovsky, “Big Bug”
Try to remember a moment from when you were young.
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In the Woods, at the Dead of Night – Exhibition at Blue Raven Gallery
© Blue Raven Gallery, Pia Paulina Guilmoth
In the Woods, at the Dead of Night, is a multi-disciplinary group exhibition, at Blue Raven Gallery, displaying a collective reverence for the
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Interview with Morganna Magee: Reverence for the Land, Animals, and People
© Morganna Magee
“I acknowledge my position as a settler on stolen Bunurong land in my daily life and art practice.
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Interview with Peah Guilmoth: The Search for Beauty and Escape
© Peah Pauline Guilmoth, “A. and O.
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Interview with Kaitlin Santoro: Memory and Photographic Ephemera
© Kaitlin Santoro, “The side door was left ajar.”, Vitreography
“My work explores time, memory, and impermanence.
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In Conversation with Cig Harvey: Beauty, Books, and Installation
© Cig Harvey, “Apple Trees (Last Light)”
I was first introduced to the work of Cig Harvey in late 2020, at a time when I was just beginning to explore the natural world, col
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Interview with Kate Greene: Photographing What Is Unseen
© Kate Greene, image from the series, “So Much Water So Close to Home”
I first met Kate Greene as a visiting artist in one of my final critiques of undergrad.










