Pilgrimage of Light

When we look at far away galaxies, or when we lay our hands on an ancient rock, we are sensing distant pasts. For instance, the light of galaxy Arp 273 we see today has traveled for 300 million years before it reaches Earth. In the same duration, Coconino Sandstone of Grand Canyon was formed. At the end of this eternity in human timescale, you and I happen to live. 

I embark on journeys to bear witness of this coexistence, starting with the legwork of landscape photographers such as Ansel Adams, visiting remote sites. With a projector and a NASA archive, I project the stars onto the terrain while photographing, altering landscapes in the same vein as John Pfahl’s. Based on preparatory research, I match the duration of the celestial light’s journey and the geologic formation’s age, in the previous instance, 300 million years. Through my Pilgrimage of Light, the heavenly and the earthly are juxtaposed for the first time. My pilgrimage, though miniscule, connects their grand journeys in space and time. 

All projected astronomical images are by NASA/ESA

On Projection

No commercially available projectors have the power and portability for the projection I envisioned. I therefore devised a projector by inverting the function of a 135mm film camera, placing a slide where the film used to be and backlighting it with a powerful flash. The light-gathering camera thus became a light-emitting projector, capable of projecting a-thousand-feet-wide images in bursts while another camera captures the landscapes overlaid with projections.

Setting up for projection at dusk at White Sands

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Pilgrimage of Light @ Grand Canyon