Delete:
(remove; erase)
(eliminate; divide)
Censor:
(examine; caution; interrogate)
(inspect; consult)
Disappear; Fade Away:
(vanish; disperse)
(mistake; omit; neglect)
Obscure; veil; make ambiguous:
(hide; cover up; latent)
(dark; night)
+++
p.5: Index
p.6: Context
### about the artwork series
p.7: Hiding text in Unerasable Characters III
p.8: ### HTML and CSS (and view source code)
p.9: ### Black Out technique
p.10: ### Blurring technique
p.11: Hiding text in Unerasable Characters II
p.12: ### Javascript and parsing simple data
p.13: ### Displaying text otherwise
p.14: Hiding text in Unerasable Characters I
p.15: ### Destroying text with Machine Learning
input > training > output-->
p.16: ### Producing gabbage text
p.17: ### Making a hidden book
p.18:Quotes
### from Yung Au (2023) again
+++
All of us have lived through some form of erasure. That is the experience of having our sentences cut short. Or the experience of being the subject of the moderation that occurs across communication infrastructures. It is having information curated for you, whether by machine, by hand or by something else entirely. Forgetting, too, is inherently a part of human memory. But, of course, as varied as our experiences of erasure, is our experiences of storage, of memory deposits, of keeping less tangible things in safe places.
The Chinese term for ‘forget’ (忘記) is made up of the individual characters ‘to forget/overlook’ and ‘to remember/keep in mind’. Likewise, the term for amnesia (失憶) is created by the individual characters ‘to omit/lose’ and ‘to recall’.
What, then, are your architectures of forgetting and remembering? What, for you, will never be erased?
+++
p.19: Blank page
p.20: Back cover
### licencing, acknowlegements (e.g zine maker)
```
tar -xvf zine_maker.tar -C /home/user/destination
unzip zinme_maker.zip -d /home/user/destination
```
TEST:
# show image
./thumbs/exhibition.jpg