NEW

NEW

Subscribe to receive the brand new biannual magazine

Receive the first volume FREE plus a Behind-The-Scenes Exploration video series when you subscribe by April 30th.

✔️ Receive your first complimentary volume right away.

✔️New volumes are shipped on June 15th and December 15, 2024 (and biannually thereafter).

✔️Receive immediate access to the Behind-The-Scenes Exploration video series by George Haas (details below)

✔️Subscribers can buy prints of layouts from the volume for $125. To purchase prints, get in touch.

✔️Cancel your subscription anytime.

What is Exploration?

Exploration is the pursuit of anything you find authentically meaningful. While it can be a career or work-related, it doesn’t necessarily need to be monetized in order to be considered exploration. Exploration can include (but is not limited to) making art, writing, creative endeavors, playing pickle ball, having a family, practicing yoga or meditation, traveling and more.

Place (plās) magazine subscription offers a space to ground the concepts of exploration, and the benefits of attachment repair, within a living, breathing example of George’s own form of exploration:
photography

As you engage the magazine, we invite you to bring curiosity to your own exploration, and the inquiry into what feels authentically meaningful to you in this life. May this project inspire your own path of clarity, discovery and action.

You’ll also receive this complimentary program with your subscription.

The Behind-the- Scenes Exploration video series by George Haas

This includes:

✔️ The magazine's origin story
(and how it fits into the greater attachment repair track of Mettagroup)

✔️What is exploration
(and how to do you elevate it over time?) 

✔️How quality of your relationships impacts the quality of your exploration
(and the signs to determine if your relationships are supporting your exploration, or hindering it)

Subscribe Today

You’ll receive the first issue free, and then your credit card will be billed on June 15th (and annually thereafter until you cancel your subscription). Please provide your preferred mailing address as well as select US or worldwide shipping when you checkout.

“The ordinariness of our lives is oftentimes rendered invisible. Where do we find meaning in the things we do have access to? In the ordinariness of finding meaning in life. This is what my photography explores.”

—George Haas, Founding Teacher of Mettagroup, Author and Photographer

About this project

It all began with an exhibit for Daidō Moriyama, a Japanese photographer and contemporary of Andy Warhol.

I always gravitated toward his imagery. My favorite series of his is a set of B&W polaroids. I’ve always liked street photographers as social commentary on culture. He made a series of magazines, and then got involved in other projects.

Daidō put out little publications, and his were simple and succinct - 12 pages. I tend to be verbose both in words and pictures, so I was inspired by this photographic format.

Places (plas) ushers in a succinctness, while continuously unfolding over time (as new editions release twice per year).

What’s the magazine’s form of expression?

I am more visually oriented in my thinking process, so I didn’t see the need for words much. It’s an entirely visual presentation of the meaning I want to communicate to people.

The word ‘place’ has 52 meanings to it. It’s one of those things that has a wide variety of meaning.

The thing about pictures is that you can juxtapose them, and it creates energy and meaning with that juxtaposition.

The people in the frame behave a certain way.

I like it to be highly digestible, so you get tastes of it. The twice a year. Over time, as the different issues come out, it creates this very elaborate conversation of our culture.

The theme of ‘places’ has inspired much of my canon of photography.

Forcing Nature is really about ‘place’.

Can you take a picture of something that provides the experience of the place, so that people have a sense of what that place is like? That’s always been of interest to me.

We have such a fluid society. There’s a large blending of culture in the West, as well as East.

And so I thought: is there a way to capture a place and its authentic essence in that moment in time?

Places (plas) is about ‘place’, so each place has the qualities of what is recognizable about that. Because of media and the nature of the way we engage with information, the things that distinguish a place both are the part of the place that’s there, and the influence of the broader culture on it.

In the late 70s or early 80s, you go to Kings Road, and everything was made in England. I went there in the 2000s, and everything was made everywhere else now.

The English micro-culture was completely absent.

If you think about it through music, the origins of the sound had to do with people. Now, it’s completely homogenized in a way.

If you think about AI coming and how it’s going to affect all of us, everything is going to be generic. There isn’t going to be anything unique, or original, and that will create a real durth of meaning.

Reflecting ‘actualness’

People are reacting to a place within which they are, and the time at which they’re in this place. At 14-15 years old, you’re learning how to cognitively engage culture.

Culture is important to us because it’s the transmission of knowledge. No one has to understand how to pave a street or build a building; it’s just handed to us.

The thing is: the thing you’re experiencing wasn’t always where you started. There was a whole history and revolution to get it to where it is now.

This glorious representation of progress begins with the development of your cognitive mind around age 15. Everything else before it, you don’t know.

So, how does that look? How do you represent that in a visual format? It’s unusual to be engaged with visual only.

With my magazine Places (plas), my intention is to engage you in a visual exploration of meaning that is not defined by the narrative of text.

George’s Journey

From New York to Los Angeles

George moved to Los Angeles from New York to work in film and photography in 1992, when he started practicing Vipassana at Ordinary Dharma in Venice, and studying Buddhist texts extensively.

From Meditation Student to Teacher

In 1998 he began study with Shinzen Young, at Vipassana Support International, who encouraged him as he did with all his senior students to begin teaching.

He began teaching meditation in 2000, founded Mettagroup in 2003, and became an empowered teacher through Against the Stream Buddhist Meditation Society, where he taught from 2007 to 2016.

In 2017, he met Dan Brown, who became his meditation teacher and also mentored him in integrating the Ideal Parent Figure Protocol into his Meditation x Attachment program.

Along with his full schedule of one-on-one students, he continues to teach weekly classes and intensives in Los Angeles and online, and offer day-long, weekend and extended retreats around the world.

Artist

George Haas is an artist with works in the permanent collections of the Hammer Museum, the Library of Congress, MoMA and the American Irish Historical Society. George Haas studied film, photography, and sculpture at Columbia College and The Art Institute of Chicago before moving to New York.

His photographs have appeared in numerous exhibitions, including The School of Art Institute of Chicago, The Bergman Gallery, The Soho Photo Gallery, Club 57, The Couturier Gallery, The Finley Gallery, and the MoMA.

His photographic and written work has appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, The LA Times Magazine, The Village Voice, Seventeen, Detour, NME, and Spy Magazine. His stage work has been performed in New York, Boston and Chicago, including No Entiendes and Doris and Inez Speak the Truth.

He wrote and directed the feature film Friends and Lovers, starring Robert Downey, Jr., Stephen Baldwin and Claudia Schiffer, distributed by Lion's Gate Films. His independent films from his New York days have been collected by MoMA. Photographs from this series have been added to the permanent collection of American Photographers at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C and to The Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles.

What People Are Saying

“Rooted in his own remarkable gender-questioning photographic work and frank personal history, George Haas’s book is a monument to an unrivaled period of artistic experimentation and identity politics in New York that has continued to inspire change and fuel the cutting-edge culture of cool into the 21st Century.”

— Ron Magliozzi and Sophie Cavoulacos, Museum of Modern Art, New York, organizers of Club 57: Film, Performance and Art in the East Village 1978-1983

“In the 1970s–as in times before and since–young misfits fled to NYC from farm and suburban towns in search of community and self-actualization. Amidst crumbling infrastructure and urban ruin, young artists of all stripes engineered a new culture, saturated in shimmering queerness and a rise-from-the-trash-heap sensibility. George Haas offers us a brilliant slice of that place and time, evoking memories of fluorescent vinyl muted with soot, pre-dawn stubble poking through pancake makeup, and dance floor smells of youthful exertion and fresh hair dye.”

— Tom Hill, activist and artist

“George Haas has a smart, sophisticated, felicitous observational eye—but more than that, he has deep compassion for who we all were when we were very young. To outward appearances, a sumptuous art book full to the bursting: large- format photographs and texts pertaining to a certain era. (As Leonard Cohen once put it, “those were the reasons/and that was New York.”)

And all that it is, gorgeously. But spend more time with The Lower Manhattan Dormitory Effect and a different picture emerges, a lost world, lost souls, lost lives, found again through Haas’ images, words, heart. The book is filled with poignance and melancholy, achingly so. Yet when you put it back in the slipcase what you are left with is resilience—and even, on a good day, a sense of triumph.”

— Howard A. Rodman. novelist (The Great Eastern; Destiny Express) and screenwriter (Savage Grace; Joe Gould’s Secret)

Lena Dunham, writer and creator of the HBO television series Girls

“George Haas will take you back to a New York that feels both impossibly glamorous and unthinkably tragic, with the precision of a scalpel and the tenderness of Proust. This is a book for anyone who has loved and lost, and for everyone who wants to better understand the ties that bind us to the places we dream of returning to but are no longer there. George is a writer of uncommon grace.”

How the magazine pairs with the Meditation x Attachment track.

In Meditation x Attachment, we’re always talking about primary and secondary exploration.

Secondary exploration is where you collect time, energy and resources to support your life.
Primary exploration is where you drive the meaningfulness of your life.

This magazine is a documentation of my primary exploration, my pursuit of meaning.

The places I go and the people I interact with, are the people I’m in relationship to and the people I encounter casually. You may notice they repeat in different issues.

So, the question I am exploring thematically is:
How do you map out what it is is meaningful in a way where someone else can see what meaning is?

Because of the interference with people’s exploration, and the interference coming so early in one’s life, the capacity to understand what IS meaningful can be lost.

For dismissing people, it can be a focus on hierarchy and resources, and for preoccupied people, it’s about proximity to get meaning. Neither one of those places provides much meaning.

So, there’s a deprivation of meaning.

Place (plas) is a visual representation of what I find meaningful and the process of finding it.

You can begin by looking at it and recognize this art as a form of primary exploration.

See what primary exploration is like, so that you can then use it as a jumping off point to discover your own primary exploration.

Each time you find a new meaning, it changes the direction of where you’re going.
So, primary exploration is a constant development and flow of what is meaningful.
Once you explore something - finding out enough about something and feeling satisfied
- you can then go into a new direction.

Subscribe to receive the brand new biannual magazine

Receive the first volume FREE plus a Behind-The-Scenes Exploration video series when you subscribe by April 30th.

✔️ Receive your first complimentary volume right away.

✔️New volumes are shipped on June 15th and December 15, 2024 (and biannually thereafter).

✔️Receive immediate access to the Behind-The-Scenes Exploration video series by George Haas (details below)

✔️Subscribers can buy prints of layouts from the volume for $125. To purchase prints, get in touch.

✔️Cancel your subscription anytime.