Interview with Lesia Vasylchenko | Berlin Art Link
Briefly

Interview with Lesia Vasylchenko | Berlin Art Link
"This exhibition brings together older works and newly produced pieces. In it I explore the notion of time and how time is measured. I'm interested in how observation technologies, especially satellite infrastructures, shape the way we perceive the world."
"Today, sensing often happens beyond human perception. Satellites, remote sensors and algorithms continuously observe the planet, producing streams of data that no human eye directly witnesses. This is the domain of remote sensing: imaging at a distance, where vision is displaced into infrastructure and computation."
Lesia Vasylchenko, a Kyiv-born artist based in Norway, explores the intersection of technology, memory, and historical time in her work. Her practice incorporates video, photography, and installation, focusing on how technological infrastructures influence perception. In her exhibition 'YesterLight - Sensing Ruptures of Time,' she combines older and new works to investigate the measurement of time and the impact of satellite imaging and remote sensing on human experience. Vasylchenko's research highlights the complexities of time and observation in contemporary society.
Read at Berlin Art Link
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