“Ruminations on time, space” and body is a small photographic series that brings together works created during the 2020 Covid-19 lockdown with earlier images rooted in experiences of trauma and heightened bodily sensation.

Created under conditions of isolation and suspension, the lockdown works reflect an intensified inward gaze, where time felt stretched, repetitive, and unstable. This temporal dislocation resonates with the earlier images in the series, produced in moments where trauma collapsed linear time and anchored experience in the body. By compiling works from different periods, the series forms a non-linear constellation, where past and present coexist and echo one another.

The images move between intimacy and distance, interior and exterior spaces, stillness and subtle motion. Architectural frames, dark interiors, blurred landscapes, and tactile surfaces operate as extensions of the body, suggesting containment, protection, or constraint. Rather than offering narrative resolution, the works linger in states of suspension, rumination, and quiet intensity.

“Ruminations on time, space and body” explores how the body becomes a vessel for memory when language falters, and how photography can function as a tool for slowing down, holding, and witnessing experiences that resist clear articulation. The series invites the viewer into a contemplative space where time is felt rather than measured, and where emotional and physical states are allowed to remain unresolved.