A Glacier’s Breath is a visual archive of exhaled time.
Each frame captures air that’s been trapped beneath the ice for centuries to millennia, now released by light, but still held by pressure.
These are not just photographs of ice.
They are fossils of atmosphere. Echoes of ancient climates. The breath of a world that no longer exists.
Glaciers mint their own insignia.
In this frame an ascending bubble encounters a colder layer and the surface refreezes around it. The rim buckles, the cap thickens, and a many-lobed crown appears. Below it, a column of tiny spheres shows the path of buoyancy halted by pressure. Hairline fractures cross the scene like fine engraving on metal.
The image reads as ceremony, yet it is a precise record of process, a meeting of temperature gradient, confinement, and time.