A few years ago, I had a dream in which I was talking with my great-grandmother, a mother figure who had passed away many years before and I never met. During my childhood the stories of my family formed an image of her and, in a certain way, a memory of her that lasts until today.
From that recall, using the collective memory as a catalyst of that past that precedes us, «Exhuming the memory» presents a group of portraits of ancestors of inhabitants of Janitzio, an island located in Michoacán, Mexico(place of origin of my family, and my Purépecha identity) of which there isn’t a photographic record. Each portrait was created by artificial intelligence using a combined process of analog photography and generative software from the collection of testimonies and descriptions from current inhabitants in the island about his ancestors through «barter tables» in which a voluntary and symbolic exchange was established with each person about his memories and references that allowed to me to exhume the identity of his ancestor, also digitalized photographs from the family archive to define features and physical characteristics related to the family context. These photographs were used to feed and train the AI algorithm and thus reconstruct the figure of the ancestor. This symbolic action, is part of an ancestral dynamic of trade and socialization among the Purépecha communities of Lake Pátzcuaro. As a result of the process, a portrait of that possible ancestor is generated, to which the family gives its own place.
After this, each image was intervened with a monochromatic mark on the glass of the frame, made with fragments extracted at pixel level from the collected archive photos, which simulate the watermark implemented by artificial intelligence when producing the images. These fragments taken from barter images, encode from the minimum unit of a digital image such as the pixel, the generative process with which the portraits are formed. This with the intention of generating a link between the deconstruction of the pixel of the original photographs, the process and the artificially generated image, and in turn creating a trace, a visual genetics of the original source that endures in the portrait.
Through this action, each portrait is a glimpse between that possible past and the present, through which the absent image of memory is exhumed.