Toccata

Toccata, 2013

Through the lens of a unique camera, built from a metronome, I examine the visual rhythm between my inner world and the universe outside.

The metronome, a tool meant to measure time in a precise, linear way, becomes something else entirely—a new bridge between the machine's steady tempo and the beautiful, unpredictable rhythm of nature.

My gaze is fixed on the horizon, that illusive line where the sky and the water meet, and for an entire day, I document the sea's shifting movements. I've chosen to divide the photograph into five separate screens, each one reflecting a part of the day. It's not just a simple record of time passing; it's a deep exploration of how time is felt, how it shifts, and how it dissolves against nature's cycles.

This project challenges the traditional idea of a camera as a tool for capturing a single moment. Instead, it turns it into a poetic instrument that measures and reveals the space and the harmony between our own human rhythm and the vast, cosmic one.

Installation shots