The Missing Moments project originates from the realisation that photography has become a recursive system of conventions of representation, as the photographs we encounter form our perception of what is photographed. Yet reality is an unbroken, fluid continuum, but we tend to perceive and preserve life as a collection of separate, extracted highlights and culmination points. This is further effectively both produced and reproduced by photography as images greatly inform our perception of the world.
The project focuses on the in-between moments and sights habitually neglected, pointing out that each moment should be of equal importance. This paradigm is informed by the principle of mathematical induction, which, liberally applied to time, suggests that each individual moment is equally important for the continuity of the construct.