Transit of the Sphinx (2024) – video documentation, 2m 20s. Table (wood, steel), slide carousel projection, printed research, brass cymbal, dog skull, motorised rail and wheels with thread, fur tree trunk, wood fossil, duck feather, found plaster sculpture of a boy holding a cat, candle, plastic motorcycle windshield – dimensions variable.
Transit of the Sphinx was a solo exhibition presented at Nonneseter Chapel in Bergen from 22–29 November 2026. The exhibition title referenced the myth of the Sphinx and its famous riddle—“What has one voice but goes on four legs in the morning, two in the afternoon, and three in the evening?”—as a metaphor for transience, mortality, and humanity’s relation to its primordial animality. Historically associated with philosophical questions of knowledge, the myth framed the installation itself as a riddle, inviting viewers to trace metamorphoses across a constellation of organic and inorganic forms to speculate on their symbolic meaning and value.