Memories of an Exhibition explores what remains of artworks in our minds once they disappear from view. Rather than representing the paintings themselves, the project focuses on their traces—diffuse, fragmented images, close to dreams, that reassemble through memory.
At the intersection of memory and imagination, these recollections reactivate past forms in the present. Artificial imagination becomes a tool to revive aesthetic experience, revealing a latent space where ideas and images coexist in potential states.
Within this space, artists are no longer merely historical figures, but presences or echoes. Color acts as a trigger for remembrance, allowing artworks to resurface in transformed ways.
The series unfolds as a wander through the remembered paintings of various major artists: Bonnard, Kandinsky, Klimt, Matisse, Monet, Degas, Turner and Van Gogh.
Memories of an Exhibition explores what remains of artworks in our minds once they disappear from view. Rather than representing the paintings themselves, the project focuses on their traces—diffuse, fragmented images, close to dreams, that reassemble through memory.
At the intersection of memory and imagination, these recollections reactivate past forms in the present. Artificial imagination becomes a tool to revive aesthetic experience, revealing a latent space where ideas and images coexist in potential states.
Within this space, artists are no longer merely historical figures, but presences or echoes. Color acts as a trigger for remembrance, allowing artworks to resurface in transformed ways.
The series unfolds as a wander through the remembered paintings of various major artists: Bonnard, Kandinsky, Klimt, Matisse, Monet, Degas, Turner and Van Gogh.