Exhibition
Can you see what I see? Photo exhibition about psychoses on Stenten in the SUND building
What does the world look like when reality starts to shift? The photo exhibition Can you see what I see? conveys personal experiences of psychosis through images, sound and storytelling. It can be experienced on the Stenten in the SUND building until 16 March 2026.

Can you see what I see? is a nationwide travelling exhibition about living with and having experienced psychosis – a condition in which one may temporarily lose touch with reality, for example through hallucinations or delusions.
The exhibition features photographs and short stories from 11 participants and was created by photojournalist Liv M. Kastrup and Rikke Kjær Poulsen.
Each story consists of two photographs: one portrait of the person and one symbolic image visualising the psychosis. These symbolic images were created in close collaboration with the participants and are based on their own descriptions of the experience.
The two photographs are accompanied by text and sound, accessible via QR codes on the exhibition panels. Through these, the participants share their experiences during the psychosis, as well as the time before and after.
The exhibition can be seen on the Stenten in the SUND building until 16 March 2026. During this period, the exhibition may be temporarily taken down in connection with events at SDU.
About the photo exhibition Can you see what I see?
Where: The Stenten, SUND building (SDU)
Period: Until 16 March 2026
Content: Photographs, text and sound (via QR codes)
Created by: Liv M. Kastrup and Rikke Kjær Poulsen
Support: The project is supported by, among others, the Lundbeck Foundation