Solar memory, spectral traces, and the long light of reckoning.
Futures Past is a constellation of photographic works that collapse temporal certainties and expose the entangled architectures of ecological grief, human ambition, and planetary witnessing. These images are summoned, burned into existence through long durations and uncertain light. Whether formed by solar exposure or mechanical error, each carries the echo of a world both passing and to come.
The works in this constellation arise from chance-based, low-tech image-making: the distorted gaze of a Holga toy camera, the silent endurance of pinhole solargraphs, the radical vulnerability of film to the elements. Through these devices, cities become ghost cities, rivers hold memories, and the sun itself becomes a co-witness, inscribing its relentless path into emulsion. The future haunts the present, and the past refuses to stay buried.
This is a place of rupture and recursion—where time warps, unspools, and offers us its afterimages.


