I worked on maze ideas for weeks, sketching and looking for inspiration. I usually spend a lot of time on Pinterest, looking at images and art styles. I particularly liked the Glasgow Style with the emphasis on stylized natural forms. I did some drafts with trees, which were okay-ish. I started thinking about what it is about trees that’s so great, and that’s when the theme of biophilia began to emerge. Trees are great. Sometimes we forget how great they are, because we are super busy with a million other things. But when we have time–and take time–to be out where there are other living things, we feel better. And in turn, a connection to the natural world allows us to really see what it is we are trying to save. I think that we need to start from a place of connection and love for the living beings around us if we are to find solutions to the serious environmental problems that we have created.
And I also have a ton of thoughts about kids and nature play, biophilic design principles for buildings and interiors, the connection between humans and pets, attention restoration theory–all kinds of biophilia-adjacent possible topics to explore.
So, I was even more determined to do a tree. I thought more about biophilia and how it could be our theme for the year. I sketched more trees, some animals, lots of leaves (which will BTW be extremely challenging for maze-goers), but there was still something missing. It somehow took me forever to realize that in a maze about biophilia, it’s not just about nature: it’s about us as well. We are part of the natural world, even if we sometimes forget it. I needed a human in the picture.
After realizing that I needed a human, it all came together. A child on a tree swing, animals hiding in the leaves and bark, Glasgow Style-inspired foliage. A big idea–biophilia– that we can hopefully turn into interesting activities and conversations for visitors, and also cool animals like snakes and frogs and owls and bats.
We hope we will have many visitors this fall out to the farm to spend some quality time with family and friends in the natural world, and we are looking forward to many conversations about trees (and other things!)
Angie