rewind.esel.at
Maria Trabulo: Set in Stone

It could be said that our life, consists many times of a constant balance between thoughts that we long to forget and memories we wish to remember forever. To erase and destroy things appears to be as significant to human existence as remembering them: from putting away what someone offered us once, to toppling a politician’s statue that for years or decades stood on a public square. Finding ourselves either burning love notes and deleting jpegs, or toppling statues and protesting on the streets, is intrinsically linked to a previous wish to remember or to be remembered. To hide away things inside boxes, to bury them or to destroy them with no trace, is an attempt at erasing something from history - whether our personal history, or a national one. The feeling and the intention are the same; it’s the scale that changes. Precisely because of these shared experiences, we all sympathize and understand the feeling of wanting to forget, as a solution to overcoming a traumatic event.

Following Wikihow’s steps on how to forget, first task is to cut off physical contact, followed by Step 2 - getting rid of what reminds one of that person, and Step 3 - removing him or her from one’s electronic life. In other words, put away and eliminate any reminders of that person, whether a photo on Facebook or a memorial on a square. But what the WikiHow to do list appears to undermine, is the immaterial aspect of remembrance. One can delete, erase, cut, get rid, remove, abolish, burn, and topple all material and digital things that remind us of someone, but what to do with what we can’t erase?

Exhibition Opening

SCHNEIDEREI IS MOVING / TEMPORARY LOCATION:
Studio Ruyter, Brucknerstraße 6, 1040 Wien

Eröffnung
Bildende Kunst
arts (general)
15.06.2017 (Thu)
19:00 -
Vin Vin at Ruyter , 1040 Wien Schneiderei @ Studio Ruyter, Brucknerstrasse 6, 1040 Wien