LightDark
Contemporary portrait photograph examining the human body held between illumination and collapse, where light becomes both revelation and destructive force.
Between Revelation and Ruin

2004–2005

Portrait Cycle
THE CONSEQUENCE OF LIGHT
Studies in Human Illumination

Between Revelation and Ruin

2004–2005
THE CONSEQUENCE OF LIGHT – Studies in Human Illumination

Archival pigment print
Analogue photography on film, later digitised
Limited edition
Available upon request

Between Revelation and Ruin situates illumination at its most unstable point. Light neither redeems nor destroys outright; it exposes with equal potential for understanding and fracture. What is revealed risks undoing what it touches.

Within THE CONSEQUENCE OF LIGHT, this image completes the series’ inquiry by holding illumination in tension. Visibility becomes irreversible — once seen, the figure cannot return to opacity. Light operates here as a decisive force, one that clarifies while simultaneously eroding protection, certainty, and distance.

The work refuses resolution. It remains suspended between insight and damage.

 

Photographic Process

Captured through analogue photography on film and later digitised, the work preserves the temporal depth and material restraint of film while allowing precise tonal calibration in its final printed form. The process reinforces the image’s attention to exposure, fragility, and the irreversible nature of illumination.

Series Context

As the concluding image of THE CONSEQUENCE OF LIGHT, Between Revelation and Ruin draws the cycle to its critical edge. Following burden, memory, and threshold, the series resolves into consequence itself — affirming illumination as a force that transforms by revealing, and transforms again by what it removes.

Availability

This work is available as part of a controlled, limited edition.
Institutional acquisition inquiries are welcome.