Artwork description:

The horizon appears sharp, stable—a constant in a landscape of movement. Yet beneath this stillness lie multiple layers of time. Through three exposures, taken from the same point, the camera registers shifting cloud formations and wave patterns that would otherwise dissolve into one another. At first glance, the image appears as a single exposure, but once you know what to look for, the layers emerge—subtle displacements of light, water, and air. It is a way of fixing time, but also a reminder of how we perceive change: it happens gradually, almost imperceptibly, until suddenly, there is no way back.

Materials used:

Analogue silver gelatin print on glossy fibre paper.

Untitled (2020) Photograph
by Ole Brodersen

£880.66 Alert

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Artwork description
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The horizon appears sharp, stable—a constant in a landscape of movement. Yet beneath this stillness lie multiple layers of time. Through three exposures, taken from the same point, the camera registers shifting cloud formations and wave patterns that would otherwise dissolve into one another. At first glance, the image appears as a single exposure, but once you know what to look for, the layers emerge—subtle displacements of light, water, and air. It is a way of fixing time, but also a reminder of how we perceive change: it happens gradually, almost imperceptibly, until suddenly, there is no way back.

Materials used:

Analogue silver gelatin print on glossy fibre paper.

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Ole Brodersen

Location Norway

About
I create art as a way to explore the forces that shape both landscapes and societies—natural, historical, and global. My work, often created using long exposures and multiple exposures, captures... Read more

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