‘As I watch [the world],’ wrote Nan Shepherd in 1945, ‘it arches its back, and each layer of landscape bristles.’ It is a brilliant observation about observation. Shepherd knew that ‘landscape’ is not something to be viewed and appraised from a distance, as if it were a panel in a frieze or a canvas in a frame. It is not the passive object of our gaze, but rather a volatile participant — a fellow subject which arches and bristles at us, bristles into us. Landscape is still often understood as a noun connoting fixity, scenery, an immobile painterly decorum. I prefer to think of the word as a noun containing a hidden verb: landscape scapes, it is dynamic and commotion causing, it sculpts and shapes us not only over the courses of our lives but also instant by instant, incident by incident. I prefer to take ‘landscape’ as a collective term forthe temperature and pressure of the air, the fall of light and its rebounds, the textures and surfaces of rock, soil and building, the sounds (cricket screech, bird cry, wind through trees), the scents (pine resin, hot stone, crushed thyme) and the uncountable other transitory phenomena and atmospheres that together comprise the bristling presence of a particular place at a particular moment.Later that night, from the deeper shadows of the-pine forest, two pairs of animal eyes glowed orange and green.
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Landscape
From The Old Ways, by Robert Macfarlane (Penguin Books, 2012) (many thanks to Deborah Madison):
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In geologic terms, the earth's surface is a restless thing, spouting and folding and splitting and dissolving. But in human terms, it appears stable, and somnolent. If we think only of "resource" and opportunity, we'll end up bereft. Humankind needs to slow down, take stock. Stop consuming greedily, catch our breath. After a millennium of rapid advance and spread, we need to step back.
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