The Salt Print Laboratory explores one of the earliest photographic processes, the salted paper print, invented by William Henry Fox Talbot in the 1830s. Within my artistic practice, this laboratory functions as a space of experimentation where I investigate the process as both image and material inquiry. Through this technique, I observe how mineral matter, light, and time interact on paper, allowing the image to gradually emerge from its fibers and reveal atmospheric landscapes that blur the boundaries between photography, drawing, and matter.
Salt print on cotton paper, A4
Salt print stored in a velvet folder, 29 Ă— 42 cm (each)
Salt print, A4
Salt print, A4
Set of six salt prints on paper, from microscopic photographs of salt crystals, A5
set of microscopic photograph of salt crystals
Set of salt prints on rice paper, A4