Automatic translation by Google Translate.We cannot guarantee that it is accurate.
Skoða vefinn á ÍslenskuTwo channel-video, two flat screen displays, a metal structure, electric motor
I’m drawn to exploring the invisible relationships between past and future, between here and elsewhere. My focus is on what cannot be seen — on escaping the limits of how we perceive time and space, and on shifting perspective.
Quantum physics suggests that everything is nothing — until balance tips and symmetry breaks, giving rise to something. Imbalance moves us forward. We can see what is there, and we can sense what is missing, what is not there.
Reality is not fixed — it is a concept or at least a probability. A shifting possibility rather than a stable ground. In mathematics, we encounter the same paradox: the unknown, represented as an abstract variable, allows us to calculate meaning. Yet numbers themselves don’t exist; they are abstract concepts — shapes without bodies.
And the way I see the world is never a true reflection of it. My perception is shaped by what is visible, but also by what is absent — everything and nothing defining the lines my mind cannot cross. Our eyes aren’t built to witness the past; we rely on memory instead. And though memory is subjective and ever-changing, it remains the thing we most trust. Well — except for emotions. Emotions, combined with our senses, shape how we perceive reality. What we care about appears larger.
Still, we cannot truly see what yesterday looked like — and perhaps that doesn’t matter. The mind feels far more comfortable imagining tomorrow and digging through what-ifs.