In the beginning of the 21st century, the relationships between bodies, images, things and environments were interconnected using information technology. What consequences does this comprehensive networking have for the construction of space and sensory perception? What interrelations and interactions
arise between a sensory subject and an increasingly sensitive environment? What happens when different senses become entangled with each other? What happens to our feeling of our own self and of the body in these new immersive and sensitive environments?
These questions led to the theme of spatial temporality. How do entities within a space relate to its temporality? In order to investigate
this visually, public spaces were filmed. Through vertical and horizontal slit scans, the spatial movement of individual objects is filtered out of a place. The slit scan makes it possible to visually experience an interval on a two-dimensional surface. Depending on which axis the slitscan is executed from, a more or less abstract image is created. Thus a picture shows a certain period of time of past and future, starting from this initial axis.