03/07/2026
✨The Slowing of Time by Emanuel Röhss✨
Join us on Wednesday, March 11 at 12pm in the Chemistry Collaboratory for this special lecture from world-renowned Swedish visual artist.
✨Video transcript: My talk will begin with my current sculpture project, in which I’m working with meteorites from
UCLA’s collection alongside other materials to create works that explore time across human, physical, geological, and metaphysical dimensions.
I’ll discuss my approach as a sculptor investigating these concepts: my initial questions and
starting points, how my research unfolds, what led me to UCLA’s meteorite collection, and how I develop sculptural forms in the studio.
I’ll also describe how I plan to work with iron meteorites from the collection as part of my current project.
✨More details: Depending on time and interest, I may include a brief hands-on demonstration of alginate molding—using a volunteer’s hand and casting it in plaster—to illustrate one of the material processes central to this project.
To provide context for this work, I’ll share previous projects that similarly engage with temporal perception, presented in reverse chronology:
• Feeding the Rat — paintings and sculptures exploring deep time through the geology of the High Sierra.
• Science of the Sublime — short film (excerpt) examining temporal experience in the Sierra Nevada.
• Times Past and Future — clay sculptures investigating Hollywood architecture, entropy, and the boundary between reality and fiction.
• Belly of the Beast — an exploration of Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1920s Los Angeles architecture as a lens for processing psychological trauma in both lived experience and cinema.
✨ BIO: EMANUEL RÖHSS (b. Gothenburg, Sweden) is a visual artist based in LA. His work explores the intersection of built environments and natural forces, examining how historical and contemporary architectures shape - and are shaped - by human consciousness, popular culture, and temporal experience.
Central to Röhss’ practice is an investigation of time across multiple scales: from the immediacy of psychological perception to the vast expanses of geological deep time.