It was only when I returned to living in the woods did I realize that much of what that work was about, was NOT having access to the woods and nature. As I was realizing this, I was reading Emerson’s Nature essay. I played around with the text and simplified it down to 30 words, few enough to memorize. I could carry the sentiment with me wherever I went. When I am in the woods I often repeat this as my mantra.
I decided to create a small little book of this mantra, paired down from the essay. The words are printed on blue French paper from a polymer plate of my handwriting. The pages, including the covers, are relief printed images–the same image repeated over and over and transformed by the different lines of text. The original one-of-a-kind mock-up was from stone lithograph prints made in grad school. The structure is derived from Hedi Kyle’s Storage Book Structure: folded pages mounted on a very thin tyvek accordion with a non-adhesive folded cover.
In the woods we return to reason and faith. Nothing can befall me in life which nature cannot repair. Standing on bare ground all mean egotism vanishes. I become transparent.