This article arises from me happening across paintings of marshlands at Pescara’s Museo dell’Ottocento. A four-part corpus is the focus of my visual analysis: Alberto Pasini’s ‘Twilight’ (1855); Giuseppe Castiglione’s ‘Landscape’ (1870); Charles-François Daubigny’s ‘Landscape with Lake’ (1872); Alceste Campriani’s ‘Sunset with Birds’ (1885). I question processes of value attribution and emotional attachment to do with a type of semi-aquatic ecosystem at some remove from capitalist practices. My deep-dive interpretations emphasise the significance of fluxional micro-worlds that would benefit from more caring-about in the present. The results of this Abruzzian observational case-study comprise musings on style and content ranging from waterside vegetation to patterns of species-typical behaviour. I come to the conclusion that such artworks are suited to galvanising observers’ sense of empathy and co-responsibility within the Earth System’s assemblage of entities spanning the human and the more-than-human.

Finch-Race, D.A. (2026). The Art of Marsh-Thinking as Ecological Care. LANDSCAPE RESEARCH, 51(1), 1-10 [10.1080/01426397.2025.2570446].

The Art of Marsh-Thinking as Ecological Care

Daniel A. Finch-Race
Primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2026

Abstract

This article arises from me happening across paintings of marshlands at Pescara’s Museo dell’Ottocento. A four-part corpus is the focus of my visual analysis: Alberto Pasini’s ‘Twilight’ (1855); Giuseppe Castiglione’s ‘Landscape’ (1870); Charles-François Daubigny’s ‘Landscape with Lake’ (1872); Alceste Campriani’s ‘Sunset with Birds’ (1885). I question processes of value attribution and emotional attachment to do with a type of semi-aquatic ecosystem at some remove from capitalist practices. My deep-dive interpretations emphasise the significance of fluxional micro-worlds that would benefit from more caring-about in the present. The results of this Abruzzian observational case-study comprise musings on style and content ranging from waterside vegetation to patterns of species-typical behaviour. I come to the conclusion that such artworks are suited to galvanising observers’ sense of empathy and co-responsibility within the Earth System’s assemblage of entities spanning the human and the more-than-human.
2026
Finch-Race, D.A. (2026). The Art of Marsh-Thinking as Ecological Care. LANDSCAPE RESEARCH, 51(1), 1-10 [10.1080/01426397.2025.2570446].
Finch-Race, Daniel A.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/1026906
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