You can’t dig a 2nd hole by digging in the same hole deeper.
Edward de Bono
- Olivera Milenaria of JáveaAt the foot of the Montgó massif, where the land flattens into the quiet agricultural valley of Les Valls, there stands a tree that has outlasted empires. The Olivera Milenaria, its scientific name Olea europae, is believed to date from around 1023 AD, making it the only olive tree from that era still standing in the area..
- Unreal CityMillennium Bridge, London after dark. Two poets stood above the Thames, a century apart, and saw opposite cities. T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) worked in a bank less than half a mile from Wobbly Bridge. Every morning he crossed the Thames, watching the crowds..
- Stone QuarryWhat the rain remembers. Water asks no permission. It finds the cuts, runs into the new edges, darkens them. For a moment the stone looks almost wet from the inside, as if something dormant is surfacing. As if the extraction has opened not just rock, but memory..
- Lago di SorapisThe lake’s hue comes from rock flour (finely ground sediment) suspended in the water, created by glacial erosion. As the glacier grinds bedrock into microscopic particles, these mineral-rich sediments remain suspended in the meltwater..
- Behind the Scenes, AI as Creative PartnerAI is only as good as the conversation you have with it. Ask better questions, get better answers. Define your constraints, then push against them..
- Dream of a CatDream of a Cat is deceptively simple. It appears to be a casual snapshot, but every element is considered: the framing that excludes to include, the light that transforms, the perspective that invites without demanding. It’s a photograph about love in its quietest form: not grand gestures but small acts of care..
- Spira AureaLeonardo da Vinci employed the golden ratio (approximately 1.618:1, or sectio aurea) throughout his work, most notably in the proportions of the human figure in Vitruvian Man and the compositional structure of The Last Supper. Da Vinci didn’t just use it, he collaborated with mathematician Luca Pacioli, who wrote De Divina Proportione (1509), calling it the divine proportion. This wasn’t mere aesthetic preference; Renaissance artists believed the golden ratio revealed the underlying mathematical harmony of nature itself..
- Chessboard of Human MotionThe title of this piece could easily be Life is a Game or Urban Chess. The overhead view reduces people to their essential forms, shapes moving across a grid. We lose individual identity and instead see: Movement patterns, social dynamics, urban choreography – the unconscious dance of public space navigation..
- Hvide SandeEven if you have to leave your comfort zone, let yourself being led to new horizons. If you stay confident on your way and keep an eye on what makes you lucky and what you love, you’ll find the right path. Be curious and humble, the magic lies in the little things..