Painting by Hirō Isono from MORI NO KOKORO/FOREST MIND, an art book released in 2023. (Special identifying detail: 2 white monkeys sitting at base of tree - so you can tell it isn't just a differently coloured version of a similar tree.)

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Painting by Hirō Isono from MORI NO KOKORO/FOREST MIND, an art book released in 2023. (Special identifying detail: 2 white monkeys sitting at base of tree - so you can tell it isn't just a differently coloured version of a similar tree.)
photo by Laurence Bouchard (laurence-bouchard.tumblr.com)
Hellelil and Hildebrand, the meeting on the turret stairs (1864) by Sir Frederic William Burton (Irish, 1816 – 1900), watercolour paint and gouache paint on paper, 95.5 × 60.8 cm (37.6 x 23.9 in), National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin
Other Shore (1895) by Czech painter Frantisek Kupka.
František Kupka (Czech, 1871-1957), Other Shore (Bank of the Marne), 1895. Oil on canvas, 46 x 34 cm. National Gallery, Prague
Illustration. Japanese postal service, year 1905
Orange-crowned Warbler (1833) by John James Audubon (American, 1785 - 1851).
Hand-coloured engraving and aquatint by Robert Havell (England, 1793 - 1878).
National Gallery of Art.
“Mother, Should I Trust The Goverment?”
Yamabushi’s Horizons by Richard Nadler @dernadler
"Released in July 2023 with @verse_works and curated by @miminguyenmimi
This series was born from a deep fascination with mountains as spiritual thresholds. Inspired by the Yamabushi, Japanese mountain ascetics who seek wisdom through endurance, solitude, and ritual, these landscapes are not simply places but states of mind.
Each horizon marks a moment of resistance and growth. Peaks that appear unreachable become invitations. Obstacles shift into teachers. The mountains rise with quiet authority, reminding us that transformation happens when we step into the unknown and remain present through the climb.
Yamabushi’s Horizons speaks of inner strength, discipline, and the quiet beauty of perseverance. A meditation on resilience. A visual mantra for moving forward, even when the path dissolves into mist."
Flouncing. The ladies' hand book of fancy and ornamental work. 1859.
Internet Archive
Red Flowers - Wendelin Wohlgemuth (1988)
Lang Campbell (1882-1937), ''Judge'', Feb. 24, 1917