Völundarhús (2023) means labyrinth in Icelandic. This installation features a classic Nordic field labyrinth built with stones from the site, intended for walking and listening to place. The site is a grassy hillock by the shore, situated between a mountain waterfall and the sea, next to a small river and an old fish factory. It is located on Iceland's northeast shore, in a village called Djúpavík. The installation remains there, shifting its appearance with the seasons and weather.

Inspired by the historical functions of the Nordic labyrinth, ritual walks, walking meditations, and especially sound walks, the installation becomes an intentional space. A labyrinth can be interpreted as an interface that concretely materializes the boundary and entrance of a process. The way is in the way is the way. My experience over the three days of building was above all a growing attunement to the stones and the weather constantly moving around me. Using no measuring tools but my own body, I lost track of who was working whom. The stones were building me as I was building the pattern. Grass, earth, stones, weather, and I merged into one mutual movement, an act of co-becoming.