Memory Net
“In English, we say we’ve ‘lost a memory.’ The phrase suggests memory has been dropped, misplaced, but not gone. A memory, a loss, may seem absent in our lives but still present in some other way, perhaps on an unseen plane of existence.
We say we ‘dredge up’ a memory. The memory sinks, drifts, but with the right line, we might catch it – an object pulled up from the deep. The Memory Net is a reoccurring temporary installation piece, approximately 30 feet in length and cut by hand from a single piece of paper. The artist travels with the piece and documents it around the world, each setting bringing new meaning to the work.” --Kascha Snavely, The Vestibule
We say we ‘dredge up’ a memory. The memory sinks, drifts, but with the right line, we might catch it – an object pulled up from the deep. The Memory Net is a reoccurring temporary installation piece, approximately 30 feet in length and cut by hand from a single piece of paper. The artist travels with the piece and documents it around the world, each setting bringing new meaning to the work.” --Kascha Snavely, The Vestibule