Emorries

a magnifying glass over photos and books

Emorries

n.
vivid memories of a certain experience that you carry in your head for years until they’re casually disputed by someone who remembers it very differently—correcting basic chronology, clarifying a misread gesture, or adding context you never knew—which makes you want to look again at all the images you’ve been using to piece together your worldview, wondering what details might’ve been hidden in shadow all this time, or washed out by your own naïveté.

After documentary filmmaker Errol Morris, whose work often addresses the fallibility of memory and how little of reality can be captured in a photograph. Pronounced “em-uh-reez,” like memories, but with a piece missing.

Lisolia

a bookcase containing objects

Aulasy

a blurry image of a house on the road

Epistrix

several doors standing in a dark room

Spinning Playback Head

silhouette of a person looking out a window

Mithenness

a person standing on the side of a road

Tirosy

a close-up of a young child's face

Daguerreologue

Daguer-reologue

a man sitting in blurred silhouette at a desk

Kerisl

piles of old books scattered in an abandoned room

Zysia

a kite soaring above an empty landscape

Keir

a snowy landscape with trees and a fence

Thwit

close-up of a person with forehead wrinkled and holding their head

Amentalio

a person in a white dress, facing away

Fellchaser

a blurred shadow of a person in a dark room

Backmasking

a woman's face with a double exposure

Affogatia

miscellaneous items on a table

Etterath

a graduation cap and gown on a chair

Appriesse

a blurry image of a person looking at mounted images

Vellichor

shelves with many books stacked and organized

Hailbound

Rivener

Craxis

a tall house of cards

Solla, Solla, Solla

a hand reaching out for plant tendril

Innity

a neatly made bed with diffused light glowing

Elsewise

Nilous

a person standing at a bus terminal

Aoyaoia

a person holding a guitar

Slipfast