Here Comes the Sun
A pair of two archival pigment prints on fine art paper mounted on aluminum Dibond, each 50 x 50 cm. Digital composite images derived from photocopy scans of photovoltaic cells and photographs of suspended silicon metal. 2025.
Here Comes the Sun.
The image is a digital composite image derived from a photocopy scan of a solar cell and a photograph of suspended silicon metalloid. It is a constructed photographic image bringing together two states of silicon: as raw metalloid and as the technological surface of a photovoltaic cell.
Here comes the Sun was created as part of the second iteration of the ongoing S-I-L-I-C-A research project, in which the artist investigates the global industrial processes behind silicon production.
The project traces the production chain of silicon used in industrial high-tech manufacturing, including semiconductors and solar cells. The sculptures are made from metallurgical silicon produced at a smelter in northern Iceland, owned by a German industrial company with historical roots in the Ruhr region.
The first iteration, S-I-L-I-C-A-0-1, was presented at Scharaun, Berlin, curated by Jaro Straub, with text by Erin Honeycutt. An earlier preview of the research project appeared in the 20th anniversary exhibition Ocean Dwellers at the Nordic Embassies in Berlin, curated by Solvej Helweg Ovesen. S-I-L-I-C-A-0-2 was presented by Gallery Gudmundsdottir in Berlin both at the SPARK Art Fair in 2025 and at the gallery during Berlin Gallery Weekend that same year. The third iteration is currently on view at Akureyri Art Museum - Iceland.