This sequence, composed for the most part (except the last two images taken in these days of forced closure at home for the serious problem of the coronavirus) from collage images made in the distant 80s and 90s, takes inspiration largely from both well-known painters such as Salvado D'Alì and both (something perhaps a little strange, but certainly reminiscent of my past as a musician) from a well-known musical group such as Genesis. In particular when the group was led by Peter Gabriel and some legendary albums such as Nursery Cryne, Foxtrot, Selling England by the pound, whose covers stimulated my imagination a lot. The collages, however, as you can easily see, I often present watches. My obsession with watches and the passing of time is closely tied to scientific understanding of what time is. Before St. Augustine humans indiscriminately believed that time was circular. Then Sant'Agostino says (there are his reasons, but analyzing them here would be too long) that time is linear. In those days science folded its awareness of itself to the will of the church for which time is accepted as linear. Today quantum physics makes us say that time from a quantum point of view, has only value within the universe. But if there was an outside (of the universe), time outside would not be worth, our clock would be stopped. But since the outside does not exist, time is something that moves within us, in the virtual universe. So what is it? that produces time? Physics says the presence of entanglement.