If we do not learn to use our planet's resources differently, one day all glaciers will have melted and will only appear in memories or stories. The photographic works anticipate such a reality in which images of the ice cave of Kötlujökull, taken in 2020, will appear to the viewer as evidence of strange planets. In a deliberately antithetical image conception of sharpness and blurring, parts of the landscape seem already shrouded in the fog of oblivion.
The series of images creates a connection between the psycho-physical consciousness of people and their surroundings. Nature is not shown in a documentary way. Rather, the recordings stand for ideas that emerge in our minds from the outside world. Humans and nature communicate with each other in a way that is difficult to put into words. The awareness of this relationship is becoming increasingly important in our time. In her work, the artist makes her personal feeling of connection with the environment tangible for the visitors. She deals intensively with humans and nature, insofar as these are not understood as separate from one another, but as elements of a large organism.
It sees it as essential to end the exploitation of the environment and no longer see it as separate from people. In order to ensure one's own survival and the preservation of the ecosystem, it is first necessary to establish a connection to nature and distance from it
to take to imagine life on another planet as an alternative. It is time to develop strategies for a future in which people live in harmony with one another, other living beings and the environment. But in order to change a state in the world, we must first change our inner attitude.