Created in 1991, Reflections marks the beginning of a lifelong exploration into perception, identity, and the ways we construct meaning... Read More
Created in 1991, Reflections marks the beginning of a lifelong exploration into perception, identity, and the ways we construct meaning from what we see. Rather than presenting a single image, the work is built through multiple viewpoints, inviting the viewer to move between observation and interpretation.
The composition explores the relationship between two individuals whose identities are revealed through reflection rather than direct representation. The accompanying detail images draw attention to moments that might otherwise go unnoticed, emphasizing that meaning often exists within the smallest fragments of a larger whole.
Long before artificial intelligence reshaped contemporary image-making, this work questioned whether reality is ever singular. Every reflection becomes another perspective, every perspective another truth. Memory, experience, and observation merge into a visual dialogue in which the viewer completes the narrative.
Although separated by more than three decades from the digital works in this collection, Reflections establishes the philosophical foundation that connects them all: an enduring curiosity about human perception, consciousness, and the evolving relationship between intelligence and the worlds we create.