Each Long Second is an attempt to visualise the virtual space of the internet and imagine the communication and flows of energy in digital space. The piece is assembled from composite photocopies, it is double-sided with black arrows on white on one surface and white arrows on black on the reverse side. Its half-drop repeat arrow print was designed so that it is very difficult to detect any repetition in the pattern of arrows. The piece makes a two dimensional surface that appears endless in its flows and changes of directions, creating a diagrammatic surface that when crumpled or folded appears to correspond/mimic the actual three dimensional distortions. It was an attempt to manifest something in perpetual limbo between two and three dimensions that can potentially be re-configured endlessly. It is by definition without a hierarchy of decisions/choices of arrangement – it is an open structure that can be made and re-made. Each Long Second will fill the confined space of UCL's North Lodge in a very different way to the large spaces it has been exhibited in before. A rota of students will re-arrange the piece each day, making the performance of this mutable structure explicit.