It looks like you have continued your preoccupation with time in this series. For example, the title in this image creates a contrast between chronological, linear time, and subjective time. I assume that the overlapping figures were photographed 12 seconds apart. However, “12 seconds ago” could also refer to the time lapse between posting the image and adding the title. The fact that blogger records the time that images are posted, adds another temporal dimension - the time frame of the viewer. While, “12 seconds ago” may have been true at the time the image was taken (or perhaps, when it was posted), it was not so by the time it was received. By leaving the reference point of the title undefined, you force the viewer to recognize that temporality and duration are always subjectively experienced in and through the present moment.
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It looks like you have continued your preoccupation with time in this series. For example, the title in this image creates a contrast between chronological, linear time, and subjective time. I assume that the overlapping figures were photographed 12 seconds apart. However, “12 seconds ago” could also refer to the time lapse between posting the image and adding the title. The fact that blogger records the time that images are posted, adds another temporal dimension - the time frame of the viewer. While, “12 seconds ago” may have been true at the time the image was taken (or perhaps, when it was posted), it was not so by the time it was received. By leaving the reference point of the title undefined, you force the viewer to recognize that temporality and duration are always subjectively experienced in and through the present moment.
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