Memory Burn: bitforms gallery in New York opens group exhibition
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Memory Burn: bitforms gallery in New York opens group exhibition
exonemo, Body Paint - 46inch/Male/White, 2015. 46 inch 1080p LCD screen, 1080p video, acrylic paint. Screen: 41.7 x 24.1 x 1.8 in / 105.9 x 61.2 x 4.6 cm. Video: 2 minutes. Courtesy bitforms gallery, New York.



NEW YORK, NY.- Inspired by Argentinian author Adolfo Bioy Casares’ 1940 novel, The Invention of Morel, the exhibition Memory Burn observes mortality and death in relation to recording devices. The title of the exhibition refers simultaneously to unforgettable visions burned in the mind and to digital burning used to archive memories.

In the novel, a fugitive stranded on an island obsesses over a beautiful tourist named Faustine, only to find out that she and her fellow travelers are three-dimensional recordings projected by a machine. Coping with loneliness and gradual madness, he learns how to integrate himself into the machine’s memory, altering it to suggest that he and Faustine are together, in love. Although the process means certain death, he wishes to live on as a projection, hoping a machine is invented that can merge his soul and conscience with Faustine’s.

The phenomenon that takes place on the island foreshadows our contemporary experience with recording devices, as well as virtuality, and electronic networks. We document our lives as if to prolong them. Featured in the exhibition are a range of works that utilize photography, video, face recognition software, and virtual reality.

Daniel Canogar will present a large-scale photographic print, “Enredos 1”, which depicts bodies tangled amongst clusters of wire. Utilizing the cobweb as a metaphor for electronic networks, the work conveys complex emotional connections tethered by technological means. The dangling bodies are connected but also imprisoned.

Japanese artist duo exonemo will display works from the series “Body Paint”, in which hand-painted LCD screens play video of performers in matching body-paint. The figures assimilate with the painted screens, expressionless and still, they blankly stare outward. A metaphor for our symbiosis with screen-based technology, we the living exist within our luminous devices.

Debuting in the U.S., Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s “Level of Confidence” commemorates the mass kidnapping of 43 students from the Ayotzinapa normalista school in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico. The project uses a face-recognition camera that tirelessly looks for the faces of the disappeared students. As a viewer stands in front of the camera, the system uses algorithms to find which student's facial features look most like the viewer. The piece can be acquired for art collections, but all proceeds are directed to a fund to help the affected community, for example in scholarships for new students at the normalista school.

Sara Ludy’s series of web based video series “Beaches” documents the artist’s travels in the online virtual world Second Life. As the artist’s avatar navigates virtual beaches, she uses her real world camera to document private resorts, fauna and flora. The resulting images are uncanny, mimicking reality but forever looping in a fantasy world. Ludy will also present “WARZONE” a field recording within Second Life.

The interactive installation “Memory/Place: My House” by Sarah Rothberg is a virtual reality recreation of the artist's childhood home made using home movies, diaries, and photographs. The virtual reality headset is situated in a physical installation that is simultaneously anachronistic and futuristic, featuring brightly colored furniture and a CRT television feed of the virtual home. The installation speculates on the emotional impact that future archiving technologies will have on personal memories.

The video series “Free Will Mode” by Angela Washko places avatars from the game The Sims into constrained and life threatening architectural environments – bedrooms without exits, inescapable swimming pools. The avatars, accepting their entrapment eat when hungry and sleep when tired, but refuse to confront the world they inhabit - even if it kills them.

Andrea Wolf’s series “Unsolicited Memories; Archival Exercises” is an archive of found super8 and 8mm films projected onto Plexiglas cubes. Just as memories can be triggered by events at random, the cubes turn on and off with no discernible pattern. A disparate array of footage populates the cubes that preserves the past and paradoxically creates new narratives.










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