The
History of Another
Shimon Attie
Casebound,
17" x 14", 48 pages
19 full color plates
2004, Twin Palms Publishing Twelvetrees Press
For a number of years, Shimon Attie
has created his own photographic palimpsests, projecting historical
images onto public spaces and then photographing them, trying
to bring out buried layers of memory. . . . "I am trying
to give visual form to history and memory which is latent in the
architecture and landscape of the present, latent but not visible,".
. . . "I have always been interested in memory," he
says. "I think a lot about the past, about my own past, and
about the collective more generally, about the memory of entire
communities. More than my therapeutic training, I think my temperament
made me interested in revealing layers of a buried or repressed
past." The projected image, Attie says, is a physical embodiment
of the process of memory itself. "Like memory, the projection
appears to have substance and materiality, but in fact it does
not—it is only photons," he says. "It’s
an illusion." The projections of historical photographs onto
actual sites in the present have a ghostly, immaterial, ephemeral
quality of fleeting memory. - Alexander Stille
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