The glaciers of Iceland are among the oldest landscapes on Earth. They carry thousands of years of history within them, yet today they are changing faster than ever before. As the ice retreats, the effects of climate change become visible in the transformation of the landscape itself.
In Between Ice and Time, I explore this moment of transition. The photographs capture a world suspended between past and future—shaped by geological processes over millennia, yet increasingly influenced by human activity.
The work resonates with the ideas of Timothy Morton, who argues that climate change is difficult to grasp as a single event. Instead, we encounter it through its effects on landscapes, weather patterns, and ecosystems. The melting glaciers of Iceland make this otherwise abstract phenomenon tangible.
Between Ice and Time reflects on impermanence, responsibility, and our place within a larger ecological system. The series invites viewers to consider the traces we leave behind and the world we are shaping for future generations.