Memory of Place is a visual exploration of time, memory, ritual, faith, relationships, love, and ultimately death.
This series is both a personal archive and a meditation on memory, place, death, and ritual. It unfolds within my grandparents’ home—a site layered with decades of continuity, where the walls, objects, and arrangements remain untouched since the 1980s. As a child, this house was an anchor; my grandparents stepped into the role of second parents while my mother balanced single parenthood, school, and work. Returning after more than a decade away, I found the space saturated with the intensity of recollection, where domestic interiors became reliquaries of faith, ancestry, love, and childhood.
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