nature de luxe

 

"People do odd things. At great expense they build houses for themselves in order to put one over on nature. This is called civilisation. Then at great expense they dispense with the advantages, gained through evolution, of a settled existence. This is called a camping holiday. People are unaware that they are doing something significant here."
Josef Engels

 

An important part of my childhood in Arizona were the camping trips we would take. In America, especially in the west, one can simply put on a back-pack, walk into the wilderness, catch a fish, build a fire and sleep on the ground. A wilderness experience had much to do with adventure; being challenged, scared and unsettled.

Upon moving to Europe in the late 80‘s, I quickly realized that the wilderness in Europe has been filtered through centuries of history and tradition and that the camping culture is far from the unpredictable and direct exchange with nature as it was in my childhood. The world of the camper is one of comfort, predictability, and a desperate attempt at a home away from home; the wilderness is avoided at all costs.

While people may long for the simple, carefree life in the midst of nature, they evidently find it impossible to live easily without comfort, safety and cleanliness. It is the search for a „true, wilderness experience”, caught between the urge to be free and the need for security.
AP

 

more about
Nature De Luxe:

Book-text from Oliver Elser (en)
  pdf 80 kB

Review from Jannie Uhre Mogensen (en)
  pdf 60 kB

Article from Josef Engels (german)
  pdf 40 kB

Article from Ulirke Matzer (german)
  pdf 60 kB

Article from Ulirke Matzer (german)
"Abseits des Reisens"
Exhibition opening, Burghausen, D
  pdf 60 kB

 

Architekturzentrum Wien | Nature De Luxe
  naturedeluxe.azw.at

Articel from Gabriele Kaiser (german)
kultur.orf.at

 

See more in the released book
Nature De Luxe
Details for the book