"Travelling Tree" collects photos taken by Ayako Mogi during her peregrinations throughout Europe and Japan with her young family. There is perhaps only one recognizable event in this work: the birth of one of Mogi's children. However, "Travelling Tree" is not so much a document of particular events as it is a meditation on the course of moments that make up one's own life. As a result, the images reproduced here are quite abstract; they might focus on experiences like a shared meal, or a rainy day. The impressions that these images generate are intentionally difficult to categorize. Mogi writes: "Within the foggy, indistinct scenes that appear before us in ordinary life, I have tried to listen to soundless voices, feel the thoughts that fail to find words, and see the invisible presences there." Approaching "Traveling Tree" with such sensitivity will yield an enriching experience. Includes English translation of a text by Ayako Mogi.

We live our usual lives in a world full of such riddles as if it were no big deal-myself, the cats, the crows, the weeds, the trees, the bread, the children-yet we are nameless experiences, nothing special, and we know nothing, we simply are, and then eventually cease to be.With my "gaze fixed upon that which disappear," I listen for the soundless voice and look intently at the invisible world, boldly pointing, "Look. Here it is." That is what this book of photographs is about. (from the postscript)