In times when people are so often reduced to numbers and measures of utility, I want to recall something else: the act of seeing together, of sharing a place. Wide Meadow is not a mirror but an exploration—of ground, of layers, of what lies between. It is an invitation into a space of vision, where fleeting moments are held before they vanish.
Here, encounters may emerge in the unexpected: in the movement between nature and concrete, in the stillness of everyday life, in the traces left by others. The work is less an answer than a series of questions—about how we inhabit place, how we find community, and how time leaves its mark.
