


De hauts sommets de granit enneigés et des pins se reflètent dans une rivière calme lors d’une claire journée d’hiver dans une vallée montagneuse.
The coral stone church on Nevis was built in the 18th or 19th century as part of the plantation-era infrastructure of the Eastern Caribbean — a place of worship whose congregation was largely enslaved, whose walls were quarried from the reef, whose history is written in what has been left out of the official record. Vegetation is reclaiming the grounds on the schedule that tropical climates keep: decades rather than centuries, the roots finding the mortar joints that the builders believed would last. The morning light in this image enters low and lateral across the churchyard, defining the texture of the coral stone — a material that records its marine origin in every surface. Greg titled the image "Ecclesia" — the Latin word for church, and also for the assembly of those who gather in it.