Memory - (Score) - Data
3-Channel Video Installation, various time on loop
How can we determine someone’s or something’s existence?
This work aims to question the notion of existence and the traces we leave behind as an entity, proposing a way to perceive memory and data as a score which indicates the spectrum between life and death. Memory or data
is a record of a certain subject or origin, and they have possibilities to be interpreted, transformed and reconstructed. By seeing them as a score, we can recall or play subject’s existence numerous times.
3 different videos are juxtaposed in the domestic set
and capturing the viewers within the net of fragmented images combined with discontinuous stories.
The video in Act 1, which borrows the method of board games, deals with how memory can operate as a score by focusing on the subjective and variable aspects
of memory.
The video in Act 2 explores the various forms of existence implied by unstable states of memory and data, with floating conversations around the questions about our own lives and disappearance.
The video in Act 3 which serves to expand the scope of the score covers two overlapping scores: the score being played, and the linguistic instructions for the sound and the image of the fingers being played.
This work aims to question the notion of existence and the traces we leave behind as an entity, proposing a way to perceive memory and data as a score which indicates the spectrum between life and death. Memory or data
is a record of a certain subject or origin, and they have possibilities to be interpreted, transformed and reconstructed. By seeing them as a score, we can recall or play subject’s existence numerous times.
3 different videos are juxtaposed in the domestic set
and capturing the viewers within the net of fragmented images combined with discontinuous stories.
The video in Act 1, which borrows the method of board games, deals with how memory can operate as a score by focusing on the subjective and variable aspects
of memory.
The video in Act 2 explores the various forms of existence implied by unstable states of memory and data, with floating conversations around the questions about our own lives and disappearance.
The video in Act 3 which serves to expand the scope of the score covers two overlapping scores: the score being played, and the linguistic instructions for the sound and the image of the fingers being played.