Coming across a climate question, I'll usually Google first, before thinking (or deciding not to think), because «It's a poor
sort of memory that only works backwards»; almost invariably, since I last updated my own memory, something new has been learned, and often Google finds it.
In 2011 Hatje Cantz Verlag published a reader on his work entitled It's a poor
sort of memory that only works backwards, with contributions by Jodi Dean, Thomas Elsaesser, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Slavoj Zizek.
MFA Fine Arts at the School of Visual Arts presented last 21st of January «It's a poor
sort of memory that only works backwards,» an exhibition of work by multimedia artist Johan Grimonprez (MFA 1992 Fine Arts), an SVA alumnus and faculty member.
In 2011 Hatje Cantz Verlag published a reader on his work titled Johan Grimonprez: It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards, with contributions by Jodi Dean, Thomas Elsaesser, Tom McCarthy, Hans Ulrich Obrist, and Slavoj Žižek.
Her proposal is a permanent reification of space through the projection of the images that evoke it, exploring the possibility that spaces might retain
a sort of memory of the actions that have taken place in them and constituing a kind of subjective architecture.
Johan Grimonprez's It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards: On Zapping, Close Encounters and the Commercial Break at the Blaffler Museum in The Visual Arts in 2011: Giving Thanks and a Wish List 15 January - 2 April 2011
Johan Grimonprez: It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards at the Blaffer Art Museum, University of Houston in Texas 15 January - 2 April 2011
Johan Grimonprez: It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards: On Zapping, Close encounters and the Commercial Break at S.M.A.K. in Ghent 15 October 2011 - 29 January 2012
Johan Grimonprez: It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards at The Fruitmarket Gallery in Edinburgh 22 May - 11 July 2010
On Friday, March 4th from 5 pm until 6.30 pm at the Armory Circle Lounge on Pier 94, the gallery will host a book launch for Belgian artist Johan Grimonprez's latest book It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards.
In 2011, Hatje Cantz Verlag published a reader on his work entitled «It's a poor
sort of memory that only works backwards» with contributions by Jodi Dean, Thomas Elsaesser, Hans Ulrich Obrist, and Slavoj Žižek.
Dennis Harper: Born in the Bayou Portable On Demand Art (P.O.D.A) Project WORK architecture company: all cultural Window into Houston — Patrick Renner Window into Houston — Elaine Bradford: The Sidereel Museum of Broken Relationships Love Is a Many Splintered Thing 33rd Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition Johan Grimonprez: It's a Poor
Sort of Memory that Only Works Backwards First Take: Okay Mountain
Like the ones that explain away the expository aspects with
some sort of memory loss, like Fallout New Vegas and BioShock.
No word yet on anything useful like perhaps an HDMI port, or
some sort of memory boost.
I just hope they'd release
some sort of memory / SIM cards for the Wi - Fi only models if they do offer service.
[You'd recall]
some sort of memory of 39, and your body tries to acclimate to that and think that way.
I know, Topshop is so iconic that way, we all have
some sort of memory like that, and now we can relive that a bit!
«Whatever it is that allows her to recognize her own style,» Landau says in the book, «I don't think we know how to categorize
that sort of memory.»
Sweatt speculates that H2A.Z plays a role in modulating memory, serving as
a sort of memory suppressor in cases of unpleasant or painful memories.
One way or another, good or bad, the semi-final at Wembley was going to create
some sort of memory.
In Whitehead's image God saves the world in his experience as
a sort of memory.
P.S. Writing that first paragraph about Cheez Whiz and Velveeta brought back
all sorts of memories of grade school sleepovers.
Do you have something in your closet that brings back
all sorts of memories the minute you slip it on?
Supported by just about
all sorts of memory cards, the application can be obtained for both Windows and Mac OS X platforms.
A brain that is deprived of sleep has trouble capturing
all sorts of memories.
Creating lasting memories Educational visits are all about creating lifelong memories and if something goes wrong, be it an unaccredited company going out of business, fallout from inadequate health and safety standards, or experiencing below par activities of amenities, then these are certainly not
the sort of memories that teachers, pupils or parents want to have.
Sure, the zoo had been changed / upgraded a lot since then but
all sorts of memories flooded back into my mind from when I was little.
Not exact matches
Such a dead simple
memory booster should be the
sort of thing schools routinely share with kids, but according to MacLeod people more often find their way to using this technique by instinct than instruction.
Investors would need to have a terribly short
memory in order to rule out that
sort of risk.
In a complex, structured environment, however, the brain
of a man for instance, there would be myriad oblique entities which, for example, might be themselves the termini
of routes
of inheritance from all over the body, which would introduce to the concrescing central entity all
sorts of new data from the complex supporting organism (such as hunger pangs, visual impressions,
memory traces, sounds, etc.) which were not directly inherited from the dominant past entity.
With regard to the coming - to - be
of an interior past (
memory), the future must have another
sort of genesis.
Often it starts with just a longing, a
sort of homesickness, a childhood
memory of affectionate grandparents, or
of a kindly word from a priest or from some Catholic neighbour.
In other words, an actual occasion experiences a peculiar
sort of dying: it passes into God's
memory as an immortal object for future experience.
Internal relations, wherever they exist, imply feelings
of some
sort, be it as
memory in relation to the past or anticipation in relation to the future.
In the wonderful explorations by Binet, Janet, Breuer, Freud, Mason, Prince, and others,
of the subliminal consciousness
of patients with hysteria, we have revealed to us whole systems
of underground life, in the shape
of memories of a painful
sort which lead a parasitic existence, buried outside
of the primary field
of consciousness, and making irruptions thereinto with hallucinations, pains, convulsions, paralyses
of feeling and
of motion, and the whole procession
of symptoms
of hysteric disease
of body and
of mind.
I can not but think that the most important step forward that has occurred in psychology since I have been a student
of that science is the discovery, first made in 1886, that, in certain subjects at least, there is not only the consciousness
of the ordinary field, with its usual centre and margin, but an addition thereto in the shape
of a set
of memories, thoughts, and feelings which are extra-marginal and outside
of the primary consciousness altogether, but yet must be classed as conscious facts
of some
sort, able to reveal their presence by unmistakable signs.
So, kudos, Lady... Me, I have this odd
memory that prevents me from accepting a religion that once said that black people were «unfinished by the Lord», a
sort of» failed attempt»... I suppose that opportunism will lead anyone anywhere, even where one should not go... (smile).
«The people I kept meeting who didn't fit the pattern were largely ignored or shoehorned in,» reports Justin, «forced to revisit their childhood
memories over and over until they found some
sort of problem to blame everything on.»
Though some people might like to dismiss these
sorts of sentiments as wishful thinking, melodramatic affectation or worse, they actually emerge from deeply held beliefs about the power
of suffering, the motivational
memory of the beloved, and ultimately the hope
of a potential reunion.
That requires that there be not only a concentration
of information
of the
sort the nervous system offers in the brain but also
memory.
Imperfect
memories, silly jingles, inhibitive timidities, «dissolutive» phenomena
of various
sorts, as Myers calls them, enter into it for a large part.
... I can tell the very place where the blessed Polycarp used to sit [note the posture
of the bishop as teacher or preacher upon his cathedra] as he discoursed, his goings out and his comings in, the character
of his life,... the discourses he would address to the multitude, how we would tell
of his conversations with John and with the others who had seen the Lord, how he would relate their words from
memory... and I can testify before God that if that blessed and apostolic presbyter had heard the like [the Gnostic vagaries], he would have cried aloud and stopped his ears and said, as was his custom: «O good God, for what
sort of times hast thou kept me, that I should endure these things?»
Narration
of this
sort is so well fitted to imprint itself upon the mind and the
memory that there can be little doubt as to the accurate preservation
of these parables.
According to Pribram (1977) and Pribram, Newer and Baron (1974), visual
memory is
of this latter
sort.
My favorite bread
memory is baking about 20 loaves
of bread at a time with my dad... We had a huge bread bowl that we had to put on the floor to knead the dough we made all
sorts of things like buns, cinnamon bun, dough dads, and
of course bread
my aunt would serve a similar dip at thanksgiving and christmas, so there's all
sorts of nostalgic
memories of my cousins and me sitting around eating chips»n dip.
Some
sort of cream was needed so I used cottage cheese: such good
memories pop up with that taste.
Served with a dollop
of some
sort of cream (almond for me and regular double for Steve) this looks like something that gustatory
memories are made
of.
Traditional for those winter months where a warm stuffed bird brings
memories of family gatherings or reminisce
of ripping open some
sort of present.
I love the idea
of printed photos, it's been so long since I last did this, and these long rainy days are just perfect for browsing photos and
sorting memories to print out.