In 2011 I was invited to come to the island of Gotland and to stay at a small guest house of a Swedish gallerist there. It was a beautiful journey and a horrible one. My marriage was falling apart and life seemed to be taking a very unexpected turn. I took thousands of photographs in Gotland. I then selected almost two hundred and kept them for ten years. My life did indeed take a turn. Many turns. Some magical and some quite dark.
I used an artificial intelligence algorithm to find the emotional connection between the many images I had taken. The result are three series of photographs. This series shows a range of emotions, the deep dark inner world I experienced and was not able to show using classic photography techniques.
We look at the world and we create it as we look. We have certain expectations of what happiness is, and togetherness and peace. They are all an agreement we created with each other over thousands of years. It takes a crazy mind or a lot of courage to question it all.
And with my photographs that’s exactly what I do. I remove the visible layer of photography and reveal an emotional layer that creates a photography of emotions. The images we look at are beautiful. But they contain pain and doubt and failure. Some images look strange and are not perfect, but they contain love and hope and ideas.
All of this has been discovered and expressed in painting and sculpture and even performative arts. But it has not been dome this way in photography yet. This is the time when it can happen for the first time. Not all photography will look like this in the future. But some photography can look this way because of a collaboration between emotions, humanity and algorithms.