MUSÉE 29 – EVOLUTION

Evolution explores the concepts of progress, transformation, growth, and advancement in an age when images are taking a dramatic shift in the role they play in our lives.

Photo Journal Monday:  Dana Stirling

Photo Journal Monday: Dana Stirling

Blue Wall, London, 2012 © Dana Stirling

Blue Wall, London, 2012 © Dana Stirling

Images and text by Dana Stirling.

My family roots back to England, but I was born in Israel. I was a child on a fence; a daughter to a migrating family. The house within culturally stayed European but outside was the Israeli controversial culture. I always felt a misfit with my partial incomplete identity; torn apart between parents who have never blended into the Middle Eastern culture I felt only half belonged to. Over the years I have heard of my parent’s memories and stories.

Float, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Float, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

I remember hearing of snow, youth and happiness. Stories of happier days. The stories held onto the memories of time and culture that I wasn’t a part of, and portraits of family members that always remained anonymous to me and their faces were no more distinct than any other person in generic photo album. These stories were supposed to be my heritage. As I grew up I’ve started to question photography’s function as my memory, as my family heritage. My photographic practice chains together straight and still life photography, found footage from my family history and imagery from family albums. Using photography I've conducted an examination of my history.

Forest Fire, Unknown © Dana Stirling

Forest Fire, Unknown © Dana Stirling

Mirror, Israel, 2012 © Dana Stirling

Mirror, Israel, 2012 © Dana Stirling

Due to the migration of my family from England to Israel that history discontinued, and therefore I find it hard to consider it as mine. In order to regain my history I’ve appropriated images, along with ones that I have made myself, and edited them into a book titled “cache memory”. The statement that represents the book is the definition of its title – cache memory. The decision to name the book and present it through this definition is handed down as recognition of what is hidden in photographs, coded and read through context; that photographs can unfold memories but not necessarily the same ones that were originally embedded in them.

Mother, London, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Mother, London, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Plastic Pink, NYC<, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Plastic Pink, NYC<, 2013 © Dana Stirling

I’m researching a history that I don’t see as actually mine; family memories that I am not part of. The images become objects that I use in order to create a new history and memory of my own; people and places as I would like to remember and understand them. I started not only looking for my identity in the old photos but also reflect my feelings from these photos on to the world around me.

Present, Unknown © Dana Stirling

Present, Unknown © Dana Stirling

Red, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Red, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

I look for moments and objects where there is a tension that is created by their incomplete aesthetic. Photography allows me to look at the little and unimportant objects around me and make them a part of my history just by giving them attention. By looking at them I capture them to remember, not letting them go away, yet not trying to save them. Watching their last seconds before I leave and the moment becomes irrelevant, capturing their last breath. With my camera I grant them with eternity and in that I grant myself a memory.

Shells, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Shells, NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Swan I, London, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Swan I, London, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Swan II, Israel, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Swan II, Israel, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Wendy's. NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

Wendy's. NYC, 2013 © Dana Stirling

This n' That: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

This n' That: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

Weekend Portfolio: Kyra Tabea Balderer

Weekend Portfolio: Kyra Tabea Balderer