A Single-channel, video, 4K, color, sound, looped, 6:38
This work investigates the tension between the physical world and the digital structures used to perceive and archive it. By overlaying a rhythmic, vertical grid onto a landscape captured at the transition of twilight, the image creates a "fissure perception"—a moment where the viewer must navigate through a veil of data to reach the underlying environment.
The vertical lines serve as both a barrier and a bridge; they mimic the scan lines of a digital screen and the physical strings of an installation, reflecting how memories of a place are often filtered through technology. This visual "frequency" suggests that reality is no longer a continuous stream but a series of intervals—a barcode of indigo and violet that vibrates with the weight of what remains hidden.
At the center of the frame, a light source emerges as a rupture in the code. This fissure represents a point where digital manipulation fails to contain the ephemeral. It mirrors the pulse of a survivor’s memory or the slow, blind movement of life beneath the static of the surface. Through this interaction of color and geometry, the work asks: what is lost, and what is revealed, when the landscape is translated into a digital frequency?