"To see a star that burned out long ago, one must be very far from it. There are even pasts that occurred at such a distance that they have not yet reached us." wrote Günther Anders.
The latent space acts like a night sky: it shelters billions of possible points, invisible to the naked eye.
To make images emerge from these points, one must connect them, trace complex trajectories that gradually sketch a reflection of what might have been, but never blossomed within our temporality.
All this is only possible if the observer stands at the right distance from the past. The figures of our constellations exist only within our own firmament.