Kanto Vol 1, 2018 | Page 31

40·786981°, –119·204379° Burning Man, Black Rock Desert, Nevada What pushed you to start Daily Overview? About four years ago, I learned about the “overview effect” from a movie that I watched. There were interviews with astronauts who spent a significant amount of time in space—an experience that fundamentally changed them as human beings. They came back to Earth with a greater sense of connectivity with others and an understanding of how fragile the planet was, and they wanted to share this shift in perspective to other people. I became obsessed with the idea and couldn’t stop thinking about its potential to change the way we see the world and treat each other. I was inspired to bring it to more people. We started sharing the images on social media, primarily on Instagram and Facebook, where we built an audience and a following. The media wrote about it, which was great, and that kind of got it off the ground. That led to the book happening. It’s gone from one step to the next slowly but surely. The most important thing at the end of the day is that we had very good content. Every single day trying to get a good new picture up for a number of years, it gave people something to look forward to, something that they are excited to receive. How do you source or create the satellite imagery used for the project? We work with a few satellite companies that provide us access to the raw image files, which we artistically manipulate and clean up. There’s a research, curation, composition and a writing process to make the whole thing come to life. How did you go about making the project a reality? I had no idea the project was going to grow to where it is now. I couldn’t have expected those things (museum exhibitions, book) to occur when I started it. But what I discovered was that I needed people to follow along with the progress and to stay interested. 29