The Telling Chronicles
Arts Illustrated|February - March 2020
When oral history leads us down another road of stories, and visual narratives weave patterns through the runway of memory lit by words
Praveena Shivram
The Telling Chronicles

It is impossible to remember the first story we ever heard even though they most likely left deep imprints on our skin, like footsteps by the shore, ephemeral in its nature but potent in its existence. It remains stubbornly dissolved, appropriated as it is by the relentless waves of time. And yet, like a forgotten toy that rolled under the cupboard and lost its way, we find the residue of memory waiting to be reclaimed, because we know the words of the first story we ever heard is constantly being born and reborn in the stories we are making and unmaking, carrying with it remnants of other words (and worlds) that might have also walked the shore.

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Esta historia es de la edición February - March 2020 de Arts Illustrated.

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