The fragmenting image is a confluence of information, experiences, and gestures, of all that is lived and embodied within the constraints of a single image. But the fragmenting image is always incomplete. It lays bare the disintegration of the familiar. In the process of this disintegration, minor subjectivities emerge through conversations and narratives layered within the act of seeing. This image creates a parallel narrative that has the possibility to open the viewer to perceive it otherwise. It emphasizes the visual sensations of overlapping and re-rendering other (othered) contextualities. The fragmenting image represents, reinterprets, and re-situates an image’s presence in a kaleidoscope of place, space, and time; it attempts to reveal the concealed.