
The Morphology of Forgetting
How draw a boundary between self and other, past time and today?
Patterns and shapes in nature often resemble one another, connecting life forms in unexpected ways. So tide lines remind me of the shapes found in wood grain, and the veins of a leaf those in a hand.
Age lines found inside tree trunks form as each outer layer covers the previous year’s growth and echoes its shape. This makes me think of how the past resurfaces as the memories which coexist in us , to recede or become important at different times, as each successive state both screens past experience and is moulded by it.
The wrapped and layered forms in The Morphology of Forgetting explore coexistence and connection.
I dedicate this exhibition to my parents, whose recent deaths have helped me appreciate memory as a way to connect through time.