This essay is inspired by Jorge Luis Borges’s short story about Funes, a young man with perfect perception and recall. His stunning archival ability allowed Funes to create a shorthand system for creativity, a “rhapsody of unconnected words” to stand in for his archive of memories: “Anything he thought, even once, remained ineradicably with him.” There is similar malady today, a cultural hyperthymesia, a fetish for the archive. Information is recalcitrant and will not disappear, which cheapens the value of information while amplifying the need for human attention. The art of searching through the information rapids, then, depends upon elimination perhaps more than retrieval. Human curators with inclinations toward perception and recall are ...
In his seven-volume novel, In Search of Lost Time (1913-1927), Marcel Proust explores the depths and...
A paper exploring the physical, creative and ethical ramifications of using a specific archive for t...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
Archiving is undergoing a grammatological shift that began with the invention of photography nearly ...
Building an official archive, a comprehensive depository of cultural memory, is an impossible pursui...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
This thesis aims at unpacking the notion of the archive and determining its limitations as a mediato...
What is an unheard avant-garde? Of course, the answer may be tautological: no one has ever heard of ...
This thesis proposes that there are specific artists whose practices utilise a collecting methodolog...
Text commissioned by Skol for the group exhibition Sortons les archives / Embracing the Archive
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
“Chaos of Memories: Surviving Archives and the Ruins of History According to the Found Photo Foundat...
The article aims at explaining archives as historical machines for information storage and retrieva
Archives are more prominent than ever, not only in art practice and theoretical discourse but also i...
In his seven-volume novel, In Search of Lost Time (1913-1927), Marcel Proust explores the depths and...
A paper exploring the physical, creative and ethical ramifications of using a specific archive for t...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
Archiving is undergoing a grammatological shift that began with the invention of photography nearly ...
Building an official archive, a comprehensive depository of cultural memory, is an impossible pursui...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...
This thesis aims at unpacking the notion of the archive and determining its limitations as a mediato...
What is an unheard avant-garde? Of course, the answer may be tautological: no one has ever heard of ...
This thesis proposes that there are specific artists whose practices utilise a collecting methodolog...
Text commissioned by Skol for the group exhibition Sortons les archives / Embracing the Archive
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
“Chaos of Memories: Surviving Archives and the Ruins of History According to the Found Photo Foundat...
The article aims at explaining archives as historical machines for information storage and retrieva
Archives are more prominent than ever, not only in art practice and theoretical discourse but also i...
In his seven-volume novel, In Search of Lost Time (1913-1927), Marcel Proust explores the depths and...
A paper exploring the physical, creative and ethical ramifications of using a specific archive for t...
A fascination with objects turned away from their original function lies at the root of surrealist t...