Motiongraph #140: Elbphilharmonie at Sandtorhafen
Capsule of Time: A Note from the River
On June 14, 2018, at 11:40 AM, I was drifting along the River Elbe in Hamburg, my Camera Obscura Boat gently rocking with the current and waves. The Elbphilharmonie stood before me at Sandtorhafen, its glass structure catching the midday light, reflecting like a shimmering mirage against the water.
I’d been working on my Motiongraph series with my mobilized Camera Obscura vehicles since 2014, but that day felt different—there was a quiet energy in the air, a sense of possibility, a perfect symbiosis of man and machine.
I set up my Camera Obscura, using two sheets of chromogenic paper to capture the scene directly on color paper as negatives. The result was Motiongraph #140, a pair of unique works, each measuring 127 x 204 cm (50.5 x 80.31 inches). The blurred, sepia-toned images—split across two perspectives—seem to vibrate with motion, as if the Elbphilharmonie itself was swaying with the river.
I remember the distant hum of the city, the faint calls of seagulls overhead, and the way the light danced on the building’s angular lines. It was just me, the river, and my Camera Obscura Boat, lost in the act of creation.
Looking back, this piece feels like a timestamp of a moment when I was fully immersed in my craft. The Elbphilharmonie, with its bold architecture, became a symbol of innovation that day, mirroring the experimental spirit of my work.
Those two negatives hold more than an image—they hold the memory of an immersive morning on the Elbe, where I felt the world fade away, leaving only the rhythm of the river and the pulse of my heart.