"What fascinates me is the ability to see a landscape not as something fixed, but as a living, moving entity - constantly shifting, evolving, becoming. Even what seems stable is in quiet motion, reminding us that place, like time, is always in flux." - Noémie Goudal 
Artist @noemiegoudal, a 2010 graduate of the Royal College of Art and winner of the Marcel Duchamp Priez in 2024, blends visual poetry with scientific inquiry in her multidisciplinary practice. Combining film, sculpture, photography, and performance, her work investigates the Earth's geological transformations and inherent instability, drawing on the concept of deep time and research in paleoclimatology.
The exhibition’s title, And Yet It Still Moves, echoes Galileo’s famous assertion, evoking the idea of Earth as a dynamic, ever-shifting body within the cosmos. Spanning three rooms, the exhibition extends Goudal’s ongoing artistic dialogue with paleoclimatology, delving into the immensity of geological time and the fundamental instability of the planet’s surface. Through the lens of “deep time” — measured in millions of years — landscapes are revealed as fleeting configurations within an endless cycle of transformation. 
finishing, grading and Printing by @granondigital 
On view until December 12, 2025 as the @edelassanti galery in London.