About the Book
This book proceeds from a refusal:
that seeing is neutral, that vision arrives whole, that the eye simply receives.
In the lineage of László Moholy-Nagy and El Lissitzky, vision is not passive—it is constructed, interrupted, engineered. The camera does not document the world; it reorganizes it. What appears as the ordinary—pavement, glass, shadow, gesture—becomes unstable under attention. Angles fracture certainty. Light behaves like language. Surfaces refuse to remain surfaces.
The four-eyed lion is not a creature. It is a condition.
Four eyes imply no singular vantage. They suggest simultaneity:
to see forward and backward, surface and structure, event and residue.
Each image in this sequence operates as a recalibration—
a minor rupture in habitual perception.
Where one eye might confirm, four begin to question.
The street, then, is not background. It is an active field of composition—
lines already drawn, grids already latent, geometries awaiting recognition.
The work does not impose order; it reveals the orders already in tension.
A bicycle rack becomes a system of circles.
A window becomes a split between worlds.
A shadow becomes a diagram.
This is not photography as memory.
It is photography as operation.
To see like the four-eyed lion is to accept that perception is plural,
that clarity is constructed, and that attention—applied with precision—
becomes a radical act.
that seeing is neutral, that vision arrives whole, that the eye simply receives.
In the lineage of László Moholy-Nagy and El Lissitzky, vision is not passive—it is constructed, interrupted, engineered. The camera does not document the world; it reorganizes it. What appears as the ordinary—pavement, glass, shadow, gesture—becomes unstable under attention. Angles fracture certainty. Light behaves like language. Surfaces refuse to remain surfaces.
The four-eyed lion is not a creature. It is a condition.
Four eyes imply no singular vantage. They suggest simultaneity:
to see forward and backward, surface and structure, event and residue.
Each image in this sequence operates as a recalibration—
a minor rupture in habitual perception.
Where one eye might confirm, four begin to question.
The street, then, is not background. It is an active field of composition—
lines already drawn, grids already latent, geometries awaiting recognition.
The work does not impose order; it reveals the orders already in tension.
A bicycle rack becomes a system of circles.
A window becomes a split between worlds.
A shadow becomes a diagram.
This is not photography as memory.
It is photography as operation.
To see like the four-eyed lion is to accept that perception is plural,
that clarity is constructed, and that attention—applied with precision—
becomes a radical act.
Author website
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Arts & Photography Books
- Additional Categories Blogs
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Project Option: Mini Square, 5×5 in, 13×13 cm
# of Pages: 24 - Publish Date: Apr 06, 2026
- Language English
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