Wednesday, March 25, 2026 | 1:00 – 4:00 pm
Robbins Hunter Museum
221 East Broadway, Granville, Ohio
The Robbins Hunter Museum invites you to experience Ohio’s Wild Grace: Photographs by Brandon Elijah Scott.
This compelling exhibition captures Ohio’s landscapes and wildlife through Scott’s intimate and reverent lens. From the still waters of Killdeer Plains to the ancient stone of Hocking Hills, the collection offers both powerful wildlife portraits and quiet, contemplative scenes that reveal the beauty and vitality of the natural world.
Admission is free.
All works will be available for purchase, with a portion of proceeds benefiting the museum’s preservation efforts and community programming.
About the Artist:
Brandon Elijah Scott is a twenty-year world traveler and explorer, photographer and artist, herbalist and healer, author and designer; a dreamer, nature lover, and lifelong seeker of truth and wisdom. He is the owner and clinical herbalist at Woodland Herbal and the Director and Professor of Green Path Academy: School of Herbalism, where he helps people reclaim practical wellness and plant knowledge with both grounded tradition and modern clarity.
At the heart of Brandon’s work is reverence: for wild places, for living systems, and for the quiet intelligence threaded through the natural world. Through his photography, he captures nature in its many moods—stormlight and stillness, shadow and bloom, the intimate lives of animals, and the overlooked miracles at our feet—with the hope of inspiring others to slow down, look closer, and protect what remains. His images are equal parts art, document and devotion: a reminder that beauty is not optional—it’s worth defending.
Brandon’s creative background spans film, marketing, branding, and web/graphic design, with experience in portraiture and storytelling across platforms. He studied computer information systems, photography, design, and marketing at The Ohio State University, and continued herbalism education through Vermont's Sage Mountain Botanical Sanctuary. Today, his work bridges conservation, education, and visual art—inviting people back into relationship with the Earth, and with themselves. View Brandon's photographic portfolio at: BrandonElijahScott.com