Measures of Presence
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Dates2025 - 2026
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Author
- Locations Portugal, United Kingdom, South Africa
Measures of Presence explores how human existence is felt across separated spaces: body, street, coast, monument, ruin and trace. Through a chain of connected encounters, the series asks how presence persists within places that exceed us.
Measures of Presence is a photographic series about the many ways presence gathers, disperses, and lingers across separated spaces. Moving between body, street, coast, monument, ruin and interior trace, the work approaches each image as a distinct site of encounter: isolated yet connected, inhabited yet unstable.
Across the series, presence is not defined only through the visible body. It is also registered through route, scale, residue, memory, weather and regrowth. A solitary figure stands within a pale terrain. A road opens toward the sea. A cliff and horizon measure human smallness against vastness. A beached boat suggests endurance and suspension. A cloud mass holds light like contained force. Monument and ruin mark the persistence of collective histories. Smoke becomes the most fragile remainder of all: a brief sign of something still here and already leaving.
The project is shaped by a sense that contemporary experience is increasingly fragmented. We move through spaces that are geographically separate, emotionally discontinuous and often encountered only in passing, yet these fragments remain in dialogue. Measures of Presence understands this condition through an archipelagic logic: not as a literal mapping of islands, but as a field of distinct yet connected presences. Distance does not break relation; it reveals it.
The series ultimately asks how human existence may be felt within places that exceed us. It proposes that presence is not only declared through action or possession, but measured through exposure, passage, endurance, recovery and trace. Each image stands apart, but together they form a chain of encounters in which the world appears larger, quieter, and more provisional than we often allow ourselves to see.