Penumbra, like the 43-minute recording In the Land of Drought, focuses on "what will come after us" and addresses the relationship between man and the impact he has on the world, looking back from a distant future imagined in the post-anthropocene, an epoch that is the result of significant human influence on the planet. This time, it seems that the human species has left the earth for good, trying its luck on a distant, hyper-urbanized desert planet. Apparently, again, things did not go well on the alien colony and only a few frantically constructed space sites seem to offer shelter. On the planet's surface we see abandoned mega-cities in a dystopian landscape, as well as circular crop fields located in the surrounding desert areas that served to nourish the last inhabitants. The camera flies over the desolate landscape and the ruined mega-cities in a meditative manner, connoting vigilance. The satellite/drone/aerial views eliminate the human perspective by keeping viewers in the distance during the course of the video.