Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking
Winter Nights, Walking

Winter Nights, Walking

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  • FW: Books / Spaces Corners 2023
  • Hardback, 1st edition
  • New

In the winter months, our planet slowly drifts towards the furthest reaches of its orbital path around the Sun who exerts just enough gravitational force to coax Earth back around one more time, lest we’re launched outward into the Solar System, starless and adrift. A steady shower of millions of individually designed crystal sculpted snow flakes create a soft temporary encasement enclosing trees, poles, wires, streets, hills and houses inside pillowed layers below. During some of those nights there is a heightened sense of stillness and quiet all around, as if the world itself was placed on mute.

The title “Winter Nights, Walking” is a reference to a celebrated photography project by the American artist Robert Adams entitled “Summer Nights, Walking”, which was made in the the city of Denver in the American West. While the project could be seen as a nod to Adams, Panar’s intention for “Winter Nights, Walking” is to make a Pittsburgh-specific project that highlights the unique qualities of the recent winter seasons in this region, with an eye towards the changing climate and the recent dark winters of the Covid-19 pandemic. Through the motif of wandering the city alone at night, Panar invites viewers to walk with him and consider the familiar space of the city in its uncanny delight.