A series of short experimental video pieces that explore the intricate and often fragmented nature of human memory. Each video features four photographs, interwoven through an array of digital effects such as glitches, distortions, ghosting, movement, pixelation etc...
These visual transitions echo the ways our memories can shift, blur, or shatter — sometimes clear, sometimes confused, and always emotionally charged.
This project is rooted in psychological themes: the fragility of recollection, the interplay of emotion and memory, and the ways experiences are reconstructed in the mind. By manipulating the images through digital effects, I’ve sought to evoke the instability and subjectivity inherent in remembering. The persistent glitches and distortions serve as metaphors for lost details, emotional impacts, or the unexpected ways the past resurfaces.
My intention is to invite viewers to reflect on their own experiences of remembering. Our minds do not store memories as perfect photographs, but rather as mutable, living fragments : sometimes comforting, sometimes unsettling, and always incomplete. Fragments of Memory is both personal and universal; it’s an invitation to witness, feel, and question the reliability of what we remember.
It's better with sound on.
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Questioning Reality: Memory is not an objective record, it's altered by emotion, time, and perspective.
The project asks: How do we construct our own histories?
Emotional Resonance: By pairing visual effects with the faded, shifting quality of recollection, I wanted viewers to feel the emotional pull of nostalgia, longing, or loss.
Universality: Everyone experiences memory in fragments, sometimes vibrant, sometimes gone.
My work seeks to connect with viewers through this shared sensitivity.