but how much better if you slept forever? explores notions of time, imagination and myth.
Presented are dense rocky landscapes, aftermaths from a slumbering ring shaped volcano beneath the sea. But, they are amalgams. Rock formations towering in scale, sewn together into delicate, unreal visions.
These volcanic explosions traverse 2000 years, the only evidence of great force revealed by shapes of waves etched into rock faces. Yet this movement is continuous. The woven rocks grow and climb at an infinitesimally slow pace. Leering, each composite mimics menacing shapes; blunted teeth, tips of crowns or bodies under rough cloaks.
The landscape as a site for the projection of imagination and myth is integral - it is a remembered or imagined site, unfaithful. These creations are ghostly and untenable, an unsettling feeling that these fragile visions might disappear in a breeze of red and blue smoke. It is the image of a dream, as if it never existed.