ABOUT MEMORY PALACE

The drive to create Memory Palace came once I found out my landlord was going to demolish our house. Though I was born and spent most of my life in Edmonton, this house was the first place that truly felt like home and many significant life events happened there including the birth of my art practice. We first rented the house when Layka was just a puppy so she could have a nice backyard to run around and play in, and we lived there for 16 years even after the fire that claimed the house next door, frequent trespassing, thefts, a break-in, and all the other problems that come with living in a pre-war house in the heart of the city. No matter how far I traveled for schooling and residencies, my mother Carmen and my dog Layka were always there to welcome me back. 

Because of the pandemic I was home all the time so I started to record and capture the spaces in and around my home using a DSLR and a 360 camera, with no real end in mind. Once our new landlord gave us our eviction notice so that the house could be torn down, I continued documenting the space and the moments of change that would come with the intention of preserving what I could. While helping my mother find a new home, my dog Layka passed away which further deepened the sorrow and grief of leaving my home behind forever.

In light of this difficult situation, I was inspired by a mnemonic technique developed in Ancient Greece called the method of loci, colloquially referred to as a "Memory Palace," wherein a person creates a virtual space in their mind associated with a real space that has been memorized. Information you wish to remember is assigned to objects in specific locations within the space, so you simply travel to the corresponding location in your mind to find the knowledge there. I wanted to use the footage I captured and combine it with new photographic technologies such as AR, 360 degree spherical videos, photogrammetry and 3D printing to create a virtual memory palace of my old home and explore how these digital tools can be used to meaningfully interact with our past by highlighting the relationship between space, objects, and memory.

The ways in which these new technologies are used in the academic, commercial, and industrial realms informs my approach on how to connect them to the greater context of photography as documentation of memories and spaces. For example, 360 spherical cameras are used to create virtual environments for real-estate and interior design, allowing distant clients to get a sense of the space without having to physically visit, as well as for use in documenting outdoor spaces and even sports. Photogrammetry and 3D scanning are widely used in archaeology and paleontology, allowing for quick preservation of archaeological sites with virtual models that can be studied year round, and for modeling and study of bones and fossils, which can then be reproduced for museum display via 3D printing. I saw the potential of these new lens-based technologies toward a more evocative and emotional purpose: capturing the essence of a space that held so many memories for me, adding to the greater activity of preserving memory, and connecting them to the greater context of lens-based practice.

In particular, the use of photogrammetry in archaeology connects my personal interests in ancient history and monumental architecture, ruins, and mysteries of the past. As these techniques are already commonly used for things like selling houses online and virtual walkthroughs, creating and printing out three-dimensional architectural models, and land surveying and development, they are the perfect tool to explore how technology can add another dimension to the experience of coping with loss and the desire to preserve the past.

Coincidentally, this exhibition will be the last one held in the current Latitude 53 space. I had created a rough 3D model of the space of Latitude 53 using photogrammetry in order to plan the exhibition virtually, and also created a 3D model of my house using 2700 photos. The 3D model of the house, viewable with the Memory Palace AR app, is placed so as to encompass the entire space of Latitude 53 in 1:1 scale, uniting both of the gallery’s spaces and allowing the viewer to walk around the yard within the gallery. The 360 degree videos are placed as cornerstones, with central objects of each space, such as the beds and couch, placed facing the videos in a viewing position. Each video is placed in central positions within the space to show the passage of time and the ambient sounds of each, with memories overlaid onto the spaces that bore them. The placement of all the exhibition elements is considered in a way that echoes the layouts of ancient megalithic structures, many throughout the world having been arranged to track the movement of celestial bodies and marking important events throughout the year, much as these monuments capture the sights, sounds, and changing shapes of space through time. 

My art practice allows me to connect with other people, and I hope this project can portray the perspective of people feeling like they exist between places and don’t have strong “roots” here, other “third culture kids”, those who feel like they belong to everywhere and nowhere; people who've had similar experiences of disconnection from home due to forces beyond their control such as environmental, political, and socio-economic factors; people who have lost their homes simply due to the passage of time and the inevitability of change; people experiencing grief and loss. As a child of Chilean immigrants who have always rented, I had always hoped that we would eventually be able to afford to buy the house, but unfortunately we were never in a position to do so, and it became another place that is relegated to the past. The only remains of my home are the objects and ephemera that remain, such as keepsakes, memories, and this exhibition as a monument.

Memory Palace was developed closely with Latitude 53. My deepest thanks go to the outgoing Director Michelle Schultz and Program Coordinator Adam Waldron-Blain for their on-going support and feedback which made the Memory Palace project possible.

Memory Palace will close on Saturday, December 17th 2022, with a closing reception and artist talk at 2pm featuring myself and Liuba Gonzalez de Armas at Latitude 53 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

This project is generously support by the Edmonton Arts Council, the Alberta Foundation for the Arts, and the Canada Council for the Arts.

CLICK HERE to go to the Latitude 53 website and read more about the exhibition and to read Liuba’s exhibition catalogue text.

CLICK HERE to download the Memory Palace AR App (for Android 8.0 and above)