ERRATICS is a research-led project examining glacially transported boulders as instruments for rethinking landscape, time, and perception. The work uses erratics not as artifacts, but as active markers of displacement, scale, and duration within contemporary environments.
The project was developed through original research and writing, tracing the movement of erratics during the last glacial maximum and their role in reshaping scientific, cultural, and environmental understanding. As physical evidence of deep time, erratics disrupted inherited readings of place, contributing to early insights into climate change, geological time, and landscape dynamics.
That research was translated into a designed body of work spanning publication and exhibition. Book design and exhibition environments were conceived as extensions of the research itself, using spatial and graphic structure to rescale perception and foreground uncertainty. Rather than documenting findings, the work stages them, positioning erratics as tools for navigating landscapes shaped by instability, loss, and ongoing transformation.
ERRATICS operates as both inquiry and form, using research, writing, and design to expand how complex systems are seen, felt, and understood.
credits
Priscilla Edge
Researcher
Writer
Map Designer
Graphic Designer
3D Designer
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