reflecting on light & space

A series of photopolymer and lumen prints that reflect on the constant, intense light of los angeles, and our indirect awareness of space and time.

While the seasonal, reflected light of an object is unrecognizable, the form is understood by our peripheral awareness and adds to our knowledge of our surroundings.  A calendar of light slowly builds — every June two sharp pinpoints of light emerge and bounce off the coffee machine, while soft undulating spotlights on the ceiling from the cat water bowls signal that July has arrived.

Multiple photographs of the light forms are printed and layered on translucent paper to record the evolving shapes of the reflected object.  And lumen prints expose silver gelatin paper directly to the light itself to record the passage of that shape over time.  The resulting soft palettes and fleeting abstract images speak to a sense of our surroundings that we create from the barest suggestion of information.  While at the same time they deny an accurate depiction or firm record of the event, lending doubt to the accuracy of individual observations.