Memoirs of the Blind is an interactive installation consisting of a screen showing a black-and-white picture of a face with its eyes closed. This image at first remains still, however, when the interactor blinks, the installation detects it and takes a photo at the exact time of the blinking. Once the new face is obtained, it is processed (cropped, desaturated, and adjusted) and then it substitutes the displayed face.
The artwork becomes a testimony of its visitors, interacting with it, but not seeing it: a moment where the visitor becomes at the same time subject and object.
The piece reflects on the power asymmetries that technology crystallises, providing a contemplative reflection on the aesthetics of our relationship with it, while simultaneously showcasing the advancements in computer vision that allow for supra-human abilities.
The title of the piece is inspired on Derridaâs book âMemoirs of the blind: the self-portrait and other ruinsâ. Derrida extends the framework of the symbolic and disrupt the relationship and meaning of the objects. Perhaps similarly, the piece appropriates this principle, proposing a poetic dimension of the power choreography in interaction.
Finally, the piece reflects on the differences between machine time and human time, what Paul Virilio once called âspeed pollutionâ.
In Memoirs of the Blind, an inapprehensible moment, the blink of an eye, is resignified in machine time as a relevant event. If Virilioâs words are to come true when he says that âthe capacity of interactivity is going to reduce the world to nearly nothing. In fact, there is already a speed pollution, which reduces the world to nothing. In the near future, people will feel enclosed in a small environmentâ; we owe our future selves explorations like the ones that this piece proposes.
Source: https://laurenzo.net/#/memoirs/