PERMANENCE
2026
The Rebellion Against Time
We exist in an era paralyzed by the fear of decay, where the preservation of youth has elevated from a personal desire to a societal obsession. In his series PERMANENCE, Arjan Spannenburg visualizes this universal, yet ultimately futile, struggle to freeze the clock.
The series presents a succession of young men, modern archetypes of the 'Adonis', placed in landscapes that range from the organic sanctuary of the forest to the unforgiving erosion of the coastline and the rigid stasis of the urban environment. Through these varying backdrops, Spannenburg explores the human condition across different stages of resistance against nature.
The Anatomy of Attachment
Connecting these diverse portraits is a singular, jarring element: a heavy industrial chain. In Spannenburg’s narrative, this chain is not an instrument of captivity, slavery, or punishment. Instead, it serves as a desperate tool of conservation.
The chain represents the fierce human desire to anchor beauty to the present moment. It is the physical manifestation of our attempt to bind the fleeting perfection of youth to the 'now,' preventing it from slipping away into an uncertain future. The subjects are not prisoners of others, but prisoners of the ideal of eternal youth.
Breaking the Monochrome
In a deliberate departure from his signature monochrome aesthetic, Spannenburg renders PERMANENCE in vivid color. Where black and white abstracts reality and creates a safe, timeless distance, color forces a direct confrontation with the subject’s vitality. The warm, pulsating tones of skin against the cold, weathering elements emphasize that we are gazing at living material, vibrant today, yet inherently subject to the ravages of time.
A Monument to the Fleeting
Ultimately, PERMANENCE is a tragic romance. It poses a confrontational question: Is our attempt to hold onto youth an act of self-love, or do we stifle the natural growth that gives life its depth? The series stands as a visual battle between the static nature of photography, which succeeds in freezing the moment, and the biological reality of the subject, for whom the chain is no match for the relentless passage of time.

