AMERICAN TIMESCAPES
American Timescapes reflects on the layered and impermanent nature of the American experience as it unfolds across time. Working within the same landscape or region, each piece is composed of three photographs captured minutes, hours, days, or years apart, then cut, folded, and assembled into three-dimensional photo-sculptures.
By physically collapsing distinct moments into a single object, the work resists linear chronology and instead treats time as something cumulative, fragmented, and materially unstable. The resulting forms function as temporal assemblages—simultaneously holding presence and absence, continuity and rupture—mirroring how collective memory and national narratives are constructed from overlapping, often conflicting, moments.