Marcia Nemer

Mapping, forgetting and failure

In the last days of June 2024 I learned something I would rather not know. Aware that the act of forgetting is something that often simply happens, I started a daily practice of checking if I could still remember what I would like to forget. The question I found myself asking as time passed and I failed is if the desire to remember is what makes us forget.

or

In the last days of June 2024, I learned something I would rather not know. 
Something I wanted to forget.

Aware that the act of forgetting is something that often simply happens, I start a daily practice: at the end of each day I sit down, stamp a date on a notebook page and take note: Do I still remember? I write using charcoal, a material that has little permanence. To work with charcoal is to constantly fight its desire to go away. Every night I take the time to see if I can still remember what I would like to forget. I know how to remember, I don’t know how to forget.  I do nothing to forget, I simply let time pass and register the presence of this thing I now know. I don’t know how to actively forget, and I choose not to learn ways to do it. I wait for it to happen.
As time passed and I failed, I found myself asking if the desire to remember is what makes us forget.

I fail over and over again. 
I still remember.

Biography

Márcia Nemer is an actor, devisor, writer and researcher. She is interested in absence and presence and in exploring the friction between theatre, visual arts and performance. Born in Brazil, she currently lives in Stockholm where she is undertaking PhD studies in performative and media based practices at Stockholm University of the Arts.