Andalusia is a place of contrasting landscapes:
From the ski mountains of the Sierra Nevada, the beaches of the Costa del Sol, the deserts of Tabernas, to the salt flats of the Cabo de Gata, travelers to this southern region of Spain can experience a wide range of topography. And the wonders don't cease there; it is a region filled with some of the most visited historical landmarks in the world. In Granada, there's the Alhambra palace, the Generalife gardens and the medieval Albaicín neighborhood; in Cordoba, the historic center with the great Mosque; in Seville, the cathedral, the Alcázar palace and the Indies Archive; and in Jaén, the monumental sites of Úbeda and Baeza.
With all of these sources of natural and man-made beauty centralized in one place, it is no surprise that Welsh-born artist Steve Brockett, a man inspired by the effects of nature and man on the land, spent ten years flying over the terrain of Andalusia in his powered paraglider with a Canon 5DMK2 strapped around his neck. “Landscape is often shaped by both natural and human acts. An aerial viewpoint gives us the chance to see this and connect to the land as a whole; to see divisions, trends and boundaries, cause and effect; to see color and shade, planting and pathways that illustrate the human and natural geography of landscape.”