c53efd_5e1b12dfd0c4432ab4be342123e26656

The Four Horses

c53efd_c605f3db36524361b39e51641a93e6e8

The Meeting

c53efd_e1665ed6dbbc4e70b137b62abcb765b3

Paradise

Photographers Deb Young and Francisco Diaz were both enamored with animals as children, Diaz with his dogs and Young with the cows and chickens raised by her family on the hilly New Zealand landscape.

In that sense, The Wandering Kind is both a personal return to the artists’ early years and a collective homecoming to mankind’s place of origin: the wilderness.

Young and Diaz, who together form the International Collaboration Project, live an ocean apart, in New Zealand and the United States respectively. Every single image in the series was forged in both their minds. They photographed the landscapes and animals from home and rearranged and reimagined them as photomontages together.

When it was possible, the creatures in The Wandering Kind were photographed in the wild and were free to roam. Both artists ventured into local forests and encountered the animals who lived there by strokes of luck. The deer, Diaz admits, were especially flighty, but their elusive character made them that much more enchanting— like the White Stage of C.S. Lewis’s Narnia.

Young is ambivalent about animals in captivity; the fact that our species so often uses others for entertainment disturbs her. At the same time, she appreciates the conservation efforts made by some zoos, and she did make a few trips to meet the creatures there, setting them free in the pictures she made with Diaz.

While The Wandering Kind certainly has a mystical storybook quality, the real magic lies in the living and breathing of the animals, in gestures rendered in an instant. The creatures, it seems, are the keepers of some great secret the human race has long since forgotten, one that can be discovered only with gentleness and without force.

If we take the time to be silent in our wandering, perhaps the riddle will be answered, not in words but in glances and hoofbeats on the forest floor. “Animals absolutely live in the present moment,” Young explains, “We learn from these creatures that life is to be fully appreciated.”

2

The Impalas

1

The Fox and the Turkeys

3

Nomads

4

The Pig & the Sparrow 

c53efd_3cb652ce3efd4664bf75bd46a2ec3fd1-mv2

3 Deer

c53efd_86985da5f6eb45d9b0d40d0cca8c2009

The Crows

c53efd_ed06b97dae5647f09f55adbe64959297

Leading a Horse to Water

All images © Francisco Diaz and Deb Young / The International Collaboration Project