When I was a kid I had a strong longing for the catastrophe, which was also my biggest nightmare. Now I am a grown-up and I constantly wait for something bad to happen and want to be prepared.
My work All Shelters are Marked With a Sign (2018-ongoing) is consisting of concerns about an unstable world and suggestions on how to cope with living in this world in the age of the anthropocene. I base my research on everyday life affected by an on-going alarm saying that if we don’t stop now, there will be nothing
When I was a kid I had a strong longing for the catastrophe, which was also my biggest nightmare. Now I am a grown-up and I constantly wait for something bad to happen and want to be prepared.
My work All Shelters are Marked With a Sign (2018-ongoing) is consisting of concerns about an unstable world and suggestions on how to cope with living in this world in the age of the anthropocene. I base my research on everyday life affected by an on-going alarm saying that if we don’t stop now, there will be nothing left to save.
I photograph with a Rolleiflex camera from 1939, when the level of CO2 in the atmosphere had the estimated value of 311 ppmv. A hundred years before that the amount was 285 ppmv. The level of today is 411 ppmv and it’s increasing with a terrifying pace*. I’m not very optimistic about our future but this work gives me comfort somehow. The title is a phrase from the broschure “If war or crisis comes” that was sent to every household in Sweden in 2018 by the government with the purpose to prepare the citizens how to act in a national emergency situation. Questions on protection and existential threats, both literally and figuratively, lie in my interest such as how these eventual threats are communicated and managed in our society.
Photography as a therapeutic method is a way of mental prepping and gives me the feeling of taking action by tweaking reality into how I interpret the world. My imagery depicts a narrative where dream and reality is intertwined, it presents a mental state of uncertainty when it is more important than ever that you take responsibility. Every image in this work is taken on the island I live on. The island works as a metaphor of isolation and vulnerability but could also be interpreted as the last safe space. To me, working locally where I live is also a statement and a protest against the conception that you have to travel to be able to tell a story. *sealevel.info
When I was a kid I had a strong longing for the catastrophe, which was also my biggest nightmare. Now I am a grown-up and I constantly wait for
When I was a kid I had a strong longing for the catastrophe, which was also my biggest nightmare. Now I am a grown-up and I constantly wait for something bad to happen and want to be prepared.
My work All Shelters are Marked With a Sign (2018-ongoing) is consisting of concerns about an unstable world and suggestions on how to cope with living in this world in the age of the anthropocene. I base my research on everyday life affected by an on-going alarm saying that if we don’t stop now, there will be nothing left to save.
I photograph with a Rolleiflex camera from 1939, when the level of CO2 in the atmosphere had the estimated value of 311 ppmv. A hundred years before that the amount was 285 ppmv. The level of today is 411 ppmv and it’s increasing with a terrifying pace*. I’m not very optimistic about our future but this work gives me comfort somehow. The title is a phrase from the broschure “If war or crisis comes” that was sent to every household in Sweden in 2018 by the government with the purpose to prepare the citizens how to act in a national emergency situation. Questions on protection and existential threats, both literally and figuratively, lie in my interest such as how these eventual threats are communicated and managed in our society.
Photography as a therapeutic method is a way of mental prepping and gives me the feeling of taking action by tweaking reality into how I interpret the world. My imagery depicts a narrative where dream and reality is intertwined, it presents a mental state of uncertainty when it is more important than ever that you take responsibility. Every image in this work is taken on the island I live on. The island works as a metaphor of isolation and vulnerability but could also be interpreted as the last safe space. To me, working locally where I live is also a statement and a protest against the conception that you have to travel to be able to tell a story. *sealevel.info
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My work All Shelters are Marked With a Sign (2018-ongoing) is consisting of concerns about an unstable world and suggestions on how to cope with living in this world in the age of the anthropocene. I base my research on everyday life affected by an on-going alarm saying that if we don’t stop now, there will be nothing left to save.
I photograph with a Rolleiflex camera from 1939, when the level of CO2 in the atmosphere had the estimated value of 311 ppmv. A hundred years before that the amount was 285 ppmv. The level of today is 411 ppmv and it’s increasing with a terrifying pace*. I’m not very optimistic about our future but this work gives me comfort somehow. The title is a phrase from the broschure “If war or crisis comes” that was sent to every household in Sweden in 2018 by the government with the purpose to prepare the citizens how to act in a national emergency situation.
Questions on protection and existential threats, both literally and figuratively, lie in my interest such as how these eventual threats are communicated and managed in our society.
Photography as a therapeutic method is a way of mental prepping and gives me the feeling of taking action by tweaking reality into how I interpret the world. My imagery depicts a narrative where dream and reality is intertwined, it presents a mental state of uncertainty when it is more important than ever that you take responsibility. Every image in this work is taken on the island I live on. The island works as a metaphor of isolation and vulnerability but could also be interpreted as the last safe space. To me, working locally where I live is also a statement and a protest against the conception that you have to travel to be able to tell a story.
*sealevel.info