For most of the earlier cultures bees were considered sacred beings, messengers between this world and the next, between the human
and divine dimension, able to cross the gates
to other worlds. They often embodied immortality, rebirth and fertility.
Their contribution for the nature world is in nothing different to those believes: as winged insemination assistants they create a connection between heaven and earth.
Yet bees are threatened with extinction.
This series deals with the search for reunion
with natural phenomena. Aiming at a thoughtful coexistence, the city is seen as a sacred place for an ethical and cognitive shift in our anthropocentric understanding of the world.
For most of the earlier cultures bees were considered sacred beings, messengers between this world and the next, between the human
and divine dimension, able to cross the gates
to other worlds. They often embodied immortality, rebirth and fertility.
Their contribution for the nature world is in nothing different to those believes: as winged insemination assistants they create a connection between heaven and earth.
Yet bees are threatened with extinction.
This series deals with the search for reunion
with natural phenomena. Aiming at a thoughtful coexistence, the city is seen as a sacred place for an ethical and cognitive shift in our anthropocentric understanding of the world.