Gone Camping | Goblin Valley, Utah
From altitude above Goblin Valley, the iron-red desert formations fill the entire frame - and somewhere in it, barely visible, a small tent confirms that someone chose this as a place to sleep.
Open edition - Aerial fine art by Tobias Hägg - 210g natural white art paper, matte finish
archival paper
shipping above €95
Stockholm, Sweden
"The quality of the images was greater than I could have ever hoped for. I am proud to call myself a collector of his work."
Matthew D. ·
Goblin Valley State Park in central Utah is one of the most remote campgrounds in the American Southwest - a landscape of eroded Jurassic mudstone hoodoos that NASA has used as a Mars analogue site, where the nearest town is an hour's drive across open desert. From altitude the terrain dominates everything - red rock formations, shadow channels, the flat expanse of the valley floor. The tent, when you find it, reads as a single small rectangle in the middle of something that was clearly indifferent to its presence long before it arrived and will remain so long after it has gone.
The image works on two levels - as a pure aerial desert landscape with a strong red palette, and as a quiet human story for anyone who takes the time to look for it. It suits spaces where people will spend time with the image rather than just passing it.
Craft & Materials
| Paper | 210g natural white art paper, matte finish - lifetime archival quality |
| Border | 50mm white border for easy framing |
| Framing | Fits standard frames (not included) |
| Sizes | 30×40 cm - 50×70 cm - 70×100 cm |
| Delivery | 3-14 days, shipped in a protective tube |
| Shipping | Worldwide - free above €95 |
| Paper | 210g natural white art paper, matte — lifetime archival quality |
| Border | 50mm white border for easy framing |
| Framing | Fits standard frames (not included) |
| Delivery | 3–14 days, shipped in a protective tube |
| Shipping | Worldwide — free above €95 |
Gone Camping
Goblin Valley State Park in central Utah is one of the most remote campgrounds in the American Southwest - a landscape of eroded Jurassic mudstone hoodoos that NASA has used as a Mars analogue site, where the nearest town is an hour's drive across open desert. From altitude the terrain dominates everything - red rock formations, shadow channels, the flat expanse of the valley floor. The tent, when you find it, reads as a single small rectangle in the middle of something that was clearly indifferent to its presence long before it arrived and will remain so long after it has gone. The image works on two levels - as a pure aerial desert landscape with a strong red palette, and as a quiet human story for anyone who takes the time to look for it.
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Every image captured from altitude by Tobias Hägg. Printed on archival paper, made to order, shipped worldwide from Stockholm, Sweden.