Detour Art.
A curated guide to Artist-built Environments and other creative places.
region by region, coast-to-coast.
Dedicated to the sheer joy of outsider, folk, visionary, self-taught, vernacular art and environment discoveries found all along the back roads (and side streets).
What is an artist-built environment?
An artist-built environment is a space shaped over time by an individual — often self-taught — who transforms land, home, or property into a fully immersive work of art.
These places might look like visionary yards, handmade architecture, sculptural gardens, roadside installations, or entire landscapes reimagined piece by piece. They are usually built outside traditional art systems — without institutional backing, formal training, or commercial intent.
They are made because someone needed to make them.
Some are preserved. Some are fragile. Some have already disappeared.
Detour Art
Detour Art is my ongoing documentation of these environments across the United States.
I travel to these places, photograph them, and gather whatever history I can find — tracing origin stories when possible and returning when the light, the weather, or the story shifts. Everything here is hand-curated and personally documented.
Because many of these environments are vulnerable to weather, development, or neglect, documentation becomes part of preservation. I share my photography with S.P.A.C.E.S. (Saving and Preserving Arts and Cultural Environments) so researchers and restoration teams can track how sites evolve over time and, when possible, restore them closer to the artist’s original vision.
This work sits somewhere between field study, archive, and love letter.
Why these places matter
Artist-built environments expand our understanding of who gets to be called an artist. They challenge the line between art, architecture, and devotion. They remind us that creativity often happens quietly, stubbornly, and without permission.
Many were built over decades. Many were built alone. All deserve to be seen.
Artist-built Environments in the United States.
Note: Things change, so check first before arriving. When visiting art environments, remember they are usually on private property, so please be respectful and don’t trespass.
“PECULIAR TRAVEL SUGGESTIONS ARE DANCING LESSONS FROM GOD.”
— Kurt Vonnegut
Road stories.
Rock Garden and Concrete Postcards - Florence Deeble
Since 1935, Miss Deeble created miniature "postal card" scenes of the places she had visited or read about in books. Some of these included Mount Rushmore, Estes Park Conference Camp, and the Tetons. Florence worked the last 10 years of her life creating tributes to the Lucas City Band, founding fathers, a monument to her father and another to her brother, Burl, who served in WWII. She enjoyed visitors to her garden and carefully kept a guest book listing everyone who visited.