Site-based research studying the horizon, its presence, absence, and the difference it makes to a place.
The Horizon Project is a site-based research practice examining the horizon, its presence, its absence, and what it does to the experience of being in a place.
A horizon is not just a view. It is a spatial condition: the point at which the visible world ends and opens. Where it exists, it changes the quality of a space, the sense of scale, exposure, distance. Where it is absent, something is lost that is rarely named.
The current focus is coastline mapping along the Konkan coast, India. Each site visit produces a field record: location, horizon type, atmospheric conditions, photographs, and observations.
Current Work
The Horizon Project develops through yearly site-based research cycles. Each year a different location or typology becomes the focus of sustained fieldwork.
2026: Coastline mapping, Goa, India A systematic field survey of coastal sites documenting horizon conditions, atmospheric variables, and the spatial quality of each location. The growing archive is published monthly via a newsletter.