As Times Echo opened to the public today, I found myself reflecting on the significance of the date—All Saints’ Day, a day for honoring those who have passed. This exhibition, featuring vintage photographs and renewed artifacts, feels strangely resonant in light of the day’s theme of remembrance. While I hadn’t intended any specific connection, the timing feels as if it brings a new layer of meaning to the work.
Each piece in Times Echo holds fragments of lives and stories, carefully brought back from obscurity and set in dialogue with the present. These images, some of them decades old, now have a second life, suspended between the past and today. This installation is about more than just memory; it’s about acknowledging what endures—what we carry forward even as time slips away. The collages, the weathered faces, the assemblages of forgotten pieces all stand as testaments to lives lived, moments shared, and histories that linger quietly, waiting to be seen again.
The coincidence of the exhibition opening on All Saints' Day feels almost like a reminder that art, like memory, has a way of surfacing when we need it most. For me, this day has allowed Times Echo to become not just an exhibition, but a space for reflection—a moment to honor what we remember and what we bring forward, even unknowingly, into the present. Thank you for joining me on this journey of remembrance and renewal.