Work > When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof

When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Night View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Day View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Front Porch View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2020
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Front Door View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, our house will have a roof - Front Door View (detail)
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Moon View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2020
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Moon View (detail)
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Top Floor View
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013
When the peaks of our sky come together, my house will have a roof - Top Floor View (detail)
Documentation of installation of semi-transparent inkjet prints at Terrain Exhibitions, Oak Park, IL
2013

A large-scale installation featuring the transference of photographic images of sunsets, “When the peaks of our sky come together…” displayed dislocated and fragmented images of the sky installed onto the street-facing windows of Terrain Exhibitions in Oak Park, IL. The work simultaneously denied occupants of the building an intelligible view of the outside, while from the road the building's exterior windows reflected sunsets from locations where the viewer was not. Large and yawning, closed and secretive, windows offer themselves up as architectural instruments, providing us opportunity to gaze onto a world, and to reimagine the impact of shifts in location, space, and time.