Daisy Patton
Who do we choose to remember, and how do we do it? This fraught terrain
encompasses family relationships, identities, and collective memorialization.
In Forgetting is so long, I collect abandoned family photographs, enlarge
them to life-size proportions, then paint over them in an to attempt to reenliven
and dislocate the images from their former places and times. By
combining paint and photography, I expand Roland Barthes’s theory linking
death and the photograph into a loving tribute of remembrance.
The use of bright swathes of color and ornate patterns signifies a kind
of vibrant afterlife, where the individual’s vestiges become visitations.
Each piece functions as an altar for the departed, a portal that fractures
linear time, and an opportunity for rich connection between the viewer
and the subject. Floral vegetation, forever blooming in fragmented time,
underlines our relationship to the natural world and the hereafter. These
rewilded botanical patterns adorn and embellish the photographic relics
with devotional marks of care. Nearly forgotten people are transfigured
and ‘reborn’ into a fantastical, liminal space that holds both beauty and joy,
temporarily suspended from oblivion.