Some pictures from ALIEN ๐ฝ at
@steinslandberliner @the_space_sthlm thank you ๐ ๐ธ
@photographedbyknotan
Supported by:
@embajada_espana_en_suecia @granerbcn @elamor_org @bcncultura @nauivanow @stockholmskonstnarligahogskola
When astronauts return to Earth after seeing it from such a distance, reality takes on shades of fiction. The planet, once abstract and intangible, grows in size, too vast to comprehend, while the observer feels smaller, almost vanishing. Words fail, and their sense of self expands beyond known boundaries.
It is in this expansion, in this slipping of the real into the fictional, that ALIEN begins. This work explores the boundaries of the human and its corporeality: a body that, like Earth seen from afar, becomes unrecognizable, a shifting image in which we lose ourselves and rediscover ourselves as something new. Here, the body is not merely a "tool" for communication but a site of estrangement and resistance, a space where self and identity are suspended in weightlessness, opening up to new potentialities.