Oculus of the Machine

Photographer

Marcel van Beek

Category

Architectural Photography - Industrial

Company

Submission Group

Professional

Year

2026

Country / Region

Germany

Oculus of the Machine isolates a segment of a massive coal excavator, transforming a functional apparatus into an ambiguous architectural apparition. Removed from its industrial context, the shovel wheel ceases to read as mining equipment; instead, it adopts the qualities of a monumental dome, an Art Deco ornament, or a vast, mechanical eye. The work is grounded in this moment of visual displacement, where a machine of extraction becomes something ceremonial, civic, and unexpectedly sublime.



The title is central to this transformation. Traditionally, an oculus is a circular aperture in a dome through which light enters. By applying this architectural term to an industrial mechanism, the image creates a charged overlap between machine and monument, function and symbol. The excavator’s radial geometry—engineered for heavy labour—is recast as a form of "engineered ornament." Its dark, symmetrical lines suggest both the precision of modern manufacture and the decorative language of an earlier, archaic modernity. This duality gives the image its unique tension: it is simultaneously brutal and elegant.



At a deeper level, the work reflects on the visual afterlife of the fossil fuel industry. The machine is not presented in purely documentary terms, but rather at the threshold where industrial form exceeds its function to become an icon. There is a subtle, inherent tension here; the viewer may initially encounter the work as a striking abstract composition before recognising the immense ecological and historical weight carried by the object. The excavator becomes a relic of energy regimes and landscapes shaped by extraction.



Compositionally, the photograph relies on frontal force and dense compression. The circularity of the form pulls the eye inward, holding the viewer in a state of suspension with no escape into open space. Oculus of the Machine proposes that industrial objects are not merely tools, but bearers of visual memory—portals through which we view the structural remains of our mechanical history.

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