At the home of Rikki and Sólrun and their two teenagers Rosa and Kári. I worked with Rikki at the Icelandic Academy of Art for some years, he is an Austrian native (actually from Bolzano which is now in the Italian Dolomite Alps) and is a print-maker. Sólrun teaches in the local school in this small fishing village of around 350 inhabitants. Rikki is still in Reykjavík finishing up teaching at the College. The drive today is long and cold. We finally get out the door around 1030 and head east to Myvatn where we happen to run into the President of Iceland and his wife who are touring the north this week. My back is not doing too well, so I give up driving and lie in the passenger seat for most of the day. We make stops at various places, tourist spots, and locations that I think might be interesting to film. The Hi8 video camera that I have with me is making something of a challenge. I have so long carried my Nikon with a 28mm lens and nothing else, that I am having trouble adjusting my seeing and pacing when using a time-based medium suddenly. One nagging feeling is the dilemma of what I will do with the material once I have gathered a number of hours of raw tape. I rarely have access to decent editing equipment, and even if I did, would I have the time to do the significant editing required to make something interesting out of it. The camera is on loan from my nephew, so I won’t have it on a continuous basis either, which limits the time for experimentation. Of course, I have used video extensively in the past, and audio also, but it remains a challenge to see creatively through this new mediation. I did happen onto an expression of an old idea that I worked with a decade ago in a photographic project with Bill, that of the “infinite half-space” of geophysics and math, where a theoretical space is divided into two half-spaces by an infinitely extensive plane. This is the beginning point of mathematical modeling of the earth and its surface and the various properties of and reactions to changes introduced by external sources. One half of the space is the earth, the other is the atmosphere or space above the surface. Anyway, this idea pops into my head as I am watch the incredibly varied earth-sky interface rolling virtually by outside the silicone-dioxide car window. I make a short video work (to be finished off with titling and all the formalist details in, Finland) called memory of three infinite half-spaces simply by filming with the camera rotated 90 degrees from the horizontal while moving and attempting to maintain the left half of the screen as sky and the right half as earth … a second short video comes from that single day — mama, where are you going? starring Loki with his expansive style. The landscape is bleak and snowy, and there is Light snow falling almost all the day with the exception of an hour spent in Egillstadir at the house of Steinnun where it was warm and sunny.