Mellanrummet Mellan Rummen included "Hungry Horizons" and "Huginn Muninn and the Horseshoe" exhibited and performed at Kallhult ett6, Mellerud Sweden, curated by Monique Wernhamn, Kristina Meiton and Sara Vogel-Rödin.
Hungry Horizons (2025)
Hungry Horizons is a six-part AR installation combining augmented reality sculptures with the Swedish landscape. The works follows Huginn and Muninn—Odin’s ravens of thought and memory—as they encounter Kalki, the yet-to-arrive god from Indian mythology. Together, they traverse unfamiliar terrain in search of origins, meaning, and the architecture of fate- and the role of thought and memory in prophecies and history of violence.
These sculptures were placed in 6 different locations in Mellerud, each one programmed differently. Upon tapping/getting close, the sculptures scaled up and down, narrated stories, revolved, and disappeared. These were generated from scans of objects and taxidermies across Swedish institutions: Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet, Etnografiska Museet, Mellerud Museum, and collections from villages such as Dals Rostock, Fengerfors, and Freyskog in Dalskog. These artefacts become portals—material traces through which mythic systems interface with landscape and history.







Huginn, Munnnin and the Horseshoe
"At the Midsommer night in the garden of Kallhult ett6, the hollow tree started glowing a bright orange. As i ventured closer to this orange, a dense mist swallowed me, unable to see anything. As i made my way, trying to feel my surroundings, my hands touched something rusty, rugged and cold; A giant horseshoe, flipped upside down. This dense mist, suddenly lifted me up, as a flash of lightning revealed two ravens, flying in perfect sync, almost mechanically, staring into eternity. A cosmic caw, from afar engulfed me, revealing the story when Huginn and Muninn, (thought and memory), the ravens of Odin flew with him to see the norns of fate, to find a way to escape a ragnarok."
The work journeys through different landmarks in an alien time, which Huginn and Muninn they don't inhabit now. Through their inability to recall, an interesection is revealed- one where destiny, an expansive self subsuming structure, tampers with the perceptioin of thought and memory. A faint recollection appears, of the ghost of Odin talking to Kalki and his golden horse, of which the horseshoe remains; as they think of destiny, codexes, death, the mobility of thought and the weight of memory.




