How do humans, no longer inhabiting the forest, perceive it today? The forest and its creatures can be observed, yet their essence often remains elusive, and encounters with them cannot be fully captured through digital images.
In Defined in Green, Yet Beyond, Park suggests various ways of observing, contemplating, representing, and naming forests.
By rethinking forests and their inhabitants—often reduced to mere backgrounds, resources, or flat greens instead of the foundation of life—Park emphasizes the unbreakable connection between the forest and our network of existence.