Perception — Chapter 4: Fractured Vision
Fractured Vision is not concerned with what blocks sight. It begins earlier — at the moment when seeing itself becomes uncertain. The world remains visible, yet its coherence loosens. Space no longer settles into a stable order. What appears cannot fully gather into meaning.
Rather than disappearing, reality starts to separate into fragments. Orientation weakens. Distances hesitate. The eye moves, but nothing quite holds. The city persists as surface and trace, but without the assurance that these parts belong together.
This chapter approaches perception as a condition of interruption. Not blindness, not absence — but a quiet loss of alignment. The images do not explain this shift; they simply remain within it. They resist clarity without denying presence.
Photographed in Hamburg, Fractured Vision marks a point where certainty gives way to doubt. It is less about what is seen than about how seeing falters — a state in which reality stays visible, yet never fully resolves.

Divided Field

Passing Through Glass

Secondary Sight

Interior Behind Glass

Layers Without Alignment

Layered Access

Broken Alignment

Grid Without Ground

Divided View

Access Denied by Light

Surface Without Axis
Extended View

Depth Without Contact

Blocked Reading

Displaced Orientation

Layered Interior

Indirect Field

Surface Without Distance

Surface Before Space

Surface Without Ground

Surface Without Inside

Broken Field