Reception: April 24, 6-8pm
The works in the series Dead Letter Office take the form of carefully edited collages, assembled to distill contemporary ideas of home, place, and memory. My process works much like memory itself, pulling together fragments from lived experience and imagination to build each image. I’m drawn to methods of working where I can rearrange, layer, and invent, thus shaping my own narratives into pieces that feel evocative yet unstable, or unresolved.
I’ve often discovered that the images and objects I’m most drawn to are the very ones others, and even I myself at first, tend to overlook. The images in this series come from online databases, real estate listings, social media, and archives, pulling from places where images circulate and accumulate, yet must be searched to be found. Each composition is shaped slowly, over time, layer by layer, to replicate a mental experience. This work probes my relationship to home, marked by the loss of its certainties and an overall sense of placelessness. The title, Dead Letter Office comes from a postal term, it’s the place where undeliverable mail ends up after the postal service has tried and failed to deliver it or return it to the sender. Mail is sent to a dead letter office when the address is missing, incorrect, or the recipient no longer lives there.
In this work, I use the term as a metaphor for memory. Like undeliverable mail, memories are often formed with an intended recipient or purpose that no longer exists. We remember people who are gone, different versions of ourselves, or places that may or may not still exist. The images remain, capturing moments that feel familiar but unresolved, like messages sent without knowing if they were ever received. The titles reference memories that influenced the images, inviting viewers to question not only the subject itself, but the ways their own perceptions shape what they see.
-Chris Ireland