The Lightworkers Film

Two films are played simultaneously, projected onto a matte gray surface as part of a video and sound installation. The Lightworkers consists of sixteen distinct sections of swamp clearings and forests, totaling more than 150 drawings, which are merged into a single, floating underwater landscape suspended between two worlds.

The film explores the acts of searching, waiting, and creating openings—holes or cracks—within a given living space. It depicts a beam of flashlight, coming from an unidentified external source, sweeping across the forest. The drawn landscape becomes a reflection of itself, gradually revealing the absence of the foundation that sustains the forest. The forest body transforms into a landscape line, moving yet trapped between one dimension and another.

The constant movement between different time zones reveals subconscious materials that have not undergone full integration. It often functions as an interface or meeting point between the invisible yet perceptible subconscious space and the physical realm, which in turn reflects their effects.