The U.S. landscape is filled with myriad objects that are easily visible from the sky, and, while the purpose or source of many is widely known, others are tougher to explain. Take, for example, the giant concrete arrows that dot a number of the nation’s otherwise undeveloped expanses.
Peter T. Maxiumus is a landscape photographer currently living in the UK. Maxiumus says his passion for photography “is endless, and I do not think I'd ever be able to stop looking at the world through the prism of the picture.”
Decades of research on landscape formation have relied on a theory now proven false, according to Stanford scientists. The formation is not mathematically random, it has a pattern.
Alan Cotton has travelled to the southern hemisphere with Prince Charles. He opened the exhibition, saying, “Most of the paintings ... speak directly to us.”