When identifying space, it is context (a space of the other) that defines and gives form and volume to space.
The wood framing stage in the construction of Canadian houses presents an unfolding of space, a partitioning of space that creates space out of space.
This new space is not only framed by the surrounding landscape (a landscape which is itself often undergoing simultaneous transformation) but also frames and redefines that landscape from within, through windows, doors and other openings.
When these spatial dynamics are coupled with the pictorial space of the photographic image and the viewing space within a gallery, an interplay of virtual and physical space is formed where space, perspective, landscape, and image become recursive.