The first piece turned out to be an installation, including an image modified from the Superman strip where the Superman has been edited out, a letter written as a child to a lost friend, and a video entitled Boys of Summer. The video consists of edited material of men and boys, which Nummela had found beautiful as a teenager. The installation speaks on longing, absence and admiration, mixing layers from early childhood emotions to teenage and adult erotic, and romantic homosexual fantasies. Later on, the video Boys of Summer was included into a larger video installation, Pervert Art. For this video Nummela edited material based on his teenage visual fantasies, represented through popular culture imaginaries of that time. In this installation, five videos, which differ from their length, loop randomly and hence every reviewing experience is different. For Nummela, this artwork represents namely images in process and an effort to include coincidence into a video artwork process when the images and their themes are more important than their form.
Nummela’s work can be seen as an example of a critical artistic process in which the piece both reflects personal experience and forms a visual research about constructed and loaded media representations of what it means to be a young man. Thus, Nummela’s artistic working process can be seen as an exploration of a certain phenomenon, to which he has a very personal relation and motivation. For us, it serves as a good example of practiced contemporary art pedagogy, where societal and cultural phenomena are contemplated using conceptual thinking through artistic language.