The Measurement Problem

€320.00

The Measurement Problem draws from quantum mechanics to examine the transition between potential and actual states. At the quantum level, systems are not defined by fixed properties, but by a range of possible outcomes that coexist until an interaction occurs.

The work engages with this condition as a conceptual structure: reality is not presented as fully determined, but as contingent—dependent on acts of observation or interaction that produce a specific result from a field of possibilities. What appears stable or resolved is therefore not fundamental, but the outcome of a process.

By translating this principle into a visual context, the piece raises a broader question about the role of the observer. It suggests that perception is not neutral, but participates in the formation of what is experienced as real. The boundary between observation and creation remains unresolved.

Rather than offering an explanation, The Measurement Problem isolates this instability, positioning it as a persistent condition at the intersection of physics, perception, and ontology.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS

This Giclée print is a limited edition of 7 copies printed on 260 gram Velvet fine art paper. Print size: 33 cm x 46,8 cm (12,9 X 18,4 inches) paper size: 42 cm x 59,4 cm (16,5 X 23,4 inches). Each print is numbered and signed and sold without a frame.

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Publication Date: September 4, 2025
Print Size: 33 x 46,8cm
Paper Size: 42 x 59,4cm
Composition No.: 58


The Measurement Problem draws from quantum mechanics to examine the transition between potential and actual states. At the quantum level, systems are not defined by fixed properties, but by a range of possible outcomes that coexist until an interaction occurs.

The work engages with this condition as a conceptual structure: reality is not presented as fully determined, but as contingent—dependent on acts of observation or interaction that produce a specific result from a field of possibilities. What appears stable or resolved is therefore not fundamental, but the outcome of a process.

By translating this principle into a visual context, the piece raises a broader question about the role of the observer. It suggests that perception is not neutral, but participates in the formation of what is experienced as real. The boundary between observation and creation remains unresolved.

Rather than offering an explanation, The Measurement Problem isolates this instability, positioning it as a persistent condition at the intersection of physics, perception, and ontology.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS

This Giclée print is a limited edition of 7 copies printed on 260 gram Velvet fine art paper. Print size: 33 cm x 46,8 cm (12,9 X 18,4 inches) paper size: 42 cm x 59,4 cm (16,5 X 23,4 inches). Each print is numbered and signed and sold without a frame.

-

Publication Date: September 4, 2025
Print Size: 33 x 46,8cm
Paper Size: 42 x 59,4cm
Composition No.: 58