On Memory: Malleable Memory and Visual Cues

What if some memories are rooted in a a place?

Recently, we took my nephews to the California Academy of Sciences. I’ve been there so many times through out my life. Because of this, I realized the words “California Academy of Sciences” don’t bring a stream of events or certain story to mind.  This is funny to me because in the same Golden Gate Park that houses the museum are the DeYoung Museum and Japanese Tea Garden- both of which I've only visited once and have very specific memories of.

When I think of the California Academy of Science, I think of the albino alligator that’s lived there since I was a child. That's exclusively what always comes to mind. There's a whirl of field trips and family trips swirling around him like a whirpool around a drain. Going to visit him the other day, he looks the same! 

It made me think how memories are malleable in different way. When you recall a memory, it is taken from it’s “memory box” and handled. Present-day thoughts effect it and it returns to the box, to be revisited again, slightly different.

My mind has handled the California Academy of Sciences quite a bit. All is blurry and hard to put into focus. All except Claude in his eternal swamp. Like other precious memories, I’m sure if I returned to the museum and didn't find Claude in his familiar spot or didn't find him at all, the museum would disappoint me. I’m sure a lot has changed about the museum since my first or last visit, but I haven’t noticed because I have fixated on him.

I wonder if my nephews will think of certain elements of the museum the same way if they were to visit a third time. I wonder if my father, who’s taken me to the museum many times, thinks of Claude the same way I do.

I learned a lot about about my own memory ron that San Francisco trip.

Before we visited the museum, we visited my grandmother’s grave. I’ve been painting my memory of the day she died but my painting stalled when I had health issues. Prior to the hiatus, the painting did prod emotional scars so I was afraid I’d be emotional at the grave.

Painting the memory was a constant feeling of vulnerability and pain but I didn’t feel as strong a flood of emotion driving through the cemetery as I did when we got to the recognizable little foot of the hill, beside the little funerary road and saw the familiar tombstone. That’s when I realized just how strong visual cues are for me. The sights really got me. Maybe that’s why I get so emotional painting rather than writing about memories.

What sensory cues do you respond most to?

 

 
 

Finished!* Spring 2002: First Time I Saw Justin

I am happy to share this finished piece with you beautiful souls!

"Spring 2002: First Time I Saw Justin"⠀2017. Acrylic, Crayon, Colored Pencil on Mixed Media Paper. 18"x24".⠀

"Spring 2002: First Time I Saw Justin"⠀
2017. Acrylic, Crayon, Colored Pencil on Mixed Media Paper. 18"x24".⠀

In this piece I explore how my mind organizes a very short but very special memory. Through creating this, I’ve learned about how I recall and prioritize stimuli from very short bursts of time.

The way I deal with remembering color is fascinating to me. It's also funny realizing I can remember a fact about a moment but not be able to establish a stable visual for it in my head. In this memory, I know my high school Newspaper teacher was present at this moment but I don’t know what he was doing or wearing (hence the word "OLSON"). The word, rather than a visual is a trigger for a fact.

If you want to know more about this piece, you can check my recent blog entry on the process and thought behind it.

Thanks for checking it out!