Interference: Drift Field
Light passing across a regular grid softens its certainty. What seems fixed begins to loosen into tonal drift, so that structure becomes contingent and unstable. The image explores how perception reshapes order through subtle shifts of light and alignment.
About Artist
Marcel van Beek
Marcel van Beek (b. 1990, Bonn) is a Leipzig-based German visual artist whose photography operates at the intersection of fine art and scientific observation. Educated at Alanus University of Arts and Social Sciences (BFA with distinction) and informed by an early formation in scenic design, he develops images of formal rigour, tactile precision, and understated cinematic tension. His practice investigates the ways in which surfaces record time — in stone, bark, concrete, or water — turning micro-topographies into structures that suggest architecture, notation, and maps. Frequently shaped through dialogue with scientific institutions, his projects examine the human condition in relation to ecological limits, while remaining rooted in material presence and exacting composition. Recent bodies of work use strictly in-camera methods to disclose hidden geometries and perceptual thresholds where depiction gives way to abstraction. Van Beek has presented solo exhibitions at the German Federal Environment Agency, the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), and Leipzig University. His work has gained increasing international attention, most recently through multiple Platinum distinctions at the 2026 MUSE Awards and an Artsy Curator’s Pick. His photographs are held in public collections, including Leipzig University, while his artist publications circulate internationally in museum and academic libraries (Basel, Vienna, Berlin, Düsseldorf). He is represented internationally via Cuencas Art Gallery on Artsy and Singulart’s curated In Focus programme.
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