Zeus
The supreme deity of the ancient Greeks, son of Cronus and Rhea, brother of Demeter, Hades, Hera, Hestia, and Poseidon, and father of a number of Gods, demi-Gods, and mortals; the God of the heavens, identified by the Romans as Jupiter.
Presented in the series ‘Pantheon of the Gods’ as an Icelandic elder overseeing the mountain ranges from an eclipse at the north pole to the Tandilia and Vantania orographic systems of Buenos Aires (where snow blanketed the city in 2007 for the first time in 89 years).
Lightning flashes in Zeus' eyes, foreshadowing the impending weather caused by the moons of Jupiter—Io and Europa—spinning around his head. And, from his waking breath, the changing seasons stir the waters between the city and the countryside.
The macro and microcosms of nature's influence, with the vulnerability of the human condition in its wake, threaten the journey of the traveller leaving the city by car late at night (lower left corner).
Fall into winter / twilight eclipse
The supreme deity of the ancient Greeks, son of Cronus and Rhea, brother of Demeter, Hades, Hera, Hestia, and Poseidon, and father of a number of Gods, demi-Gods, and mortals; the God of the heavens, identified by the Romans as Jupiter.
Presented in the series ‘Pantheon of the Gods’ as an Icelandic elder overseeing the mountain ranges from an eclipse at the north pole to the Tandilia and Vantania orographic systems of Buenos Aires (where snow blanketed the city in 2007 for the first time in 89 years).
Lightning flashes in Zeus' eyes, foreshadowing the impending weather caused by the moons of Jupiter—Io and Europa—spinning around his head. And, from his waking breath, the changing seasons stir the waters between the city and the countryside.
The macro and microcosms of nature's influence, with the vulnerability of the human condition in its wake, threaten the journey of the traveller leaving the city by car late at night (lower left corner).
Fall into winter / twilight eclipse
© Copyright 2016 Jeffrey A’Hearn