Waves from a Forgotten Frequency

Single-channel video
Duration: 3:16 min

Waves from a Forgotten Frequency” reflects on the fragile relationship between movement and memory. Seen through the window of a moving train, the passing landscape becomes a shifting sequence of images—houses, trees, stations, people, and animals—slipping quietly in and out of view. The journey unfolds like fragments of a distant recollection, where each frame appears briefly before dissolving into the next.

The work draws on the sensation of looking through a train window, where the world seems to move in reverse while the viewer remains still. This experience evokes the feeling of watching an old television set from the 1970s or 1980s, where images flicker across the screen with a quiet, nostalgic rhythm.

Rather than following a narrative, the film operates through fleeting impressions and visual transitions. The continuous flow of passing scenes forms a subtle meditation on time, distance, and the way movement can trigger fragments of memory.

Within this short duration, the train window becomes both frame and device—transforming an everyday journey into a stream of images that drift between observation, recollection, and imagination.