Greyscape

"Freedom of choice, however, leads not to chaos, but to new and more subtle forms of order."

- Lebbus Woods


We do not merely look we interpret.

Without our brain our eyes do nothing but look from object to object denoting no special meaning; it is only through the dialogue between the eye and the brain that we learn to see and thus create causation and association between objects, ourselves, and time. The combination of the object, ourselves, and time allows for an abstraction in both the way we remember the object and how we represent the object for communication with others.

Greyscapes become the moments when we stand on the threshold between looking at and seeing the object- at that moment there is neither fact nor fiction, nor a linear continuum between the two. Instead, it is a reality that inherently accepts the existence of contradictions and ambiguities. Greyscapes are not the memories themselves, instead are the interpretations we make of our surroundings and events that create the stories we tell ourselves in order to believe in them. Un-beholden to the confines of truth or logic; only later do they then become facts.