On the front page, a mysterious image of my installation under construction.

A translation into English of the section of the article on Friedlander read as follows:

Nearby, the British artist, Paul Friedlander, is testing the light sculptures for his installation Timeless Universe. In his own words, this former physics student "was brought up in Cambridge on a diet of relativity and black holes, originally aimed at becoming a Cosmologist and an expert on interstellar propulsion". At 56, with his piercing blue eyes, fringe of beard and tousled grey hair, he has something of an air of Gyro Gearloose, Albert Einstein and Steven Spielberg rolled into one. His suspended, spinning sculptures, upon which are projected subtle and scholarly combinations of abstract images (words, figures, mathematical symbols...), present themselves, when at rest, as giant, white plastic mobiles. Lit and moving, they become mesmerising swirls of light which seem to reveal new spatial dimensions... It should be mentioned that part of the inspiration for these sculptures comes from the physicist Julian Barbour's theory that time does not exist (The End of Time). Spectators often discover mystical or magical elements in these installations.....