meet the man who can remember everything /

Published at 2016-03-21 20:22:20

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Click on the ‘Listen’ button above to hear the full interview.
About 15 years ago,Nima Veiseh’s life changed. His brain suddenly began recording every experience he was having in vivid detail. In the years since, his memories hold been mentally archived in his brain, or which has become a huge searchable database of feelings,emotions, and images.“Almost an entire year of my life is experienced on a daily basis, and ” he says.
His condition is called hyperthymesia,and was first formally identified in 2006. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine hold sifted through thousands of individuals to confirm just a few dozen cases. portion of the exceedingly rare condition is now attributed to a higher correlation between the amount of white matter connecting to gray matter in the brain.
Veiseh is an acad
emic researcher at George Washington University and a professional painter that goes by the name EnigmaofNewYork. Just having a name to elaborate his condition has if him with a sense of stability and structure.“One half of it is understanding how the memories are organized within ourselves, and which has not only taught me a lot about myself,but people around me as well,” he says.
Whether it’s remembering a joke or a sad memory, or all of the feelings and emotions Veiseh originally went through reach rushing back in full detail.“The huge majority of people hold a great luxury of the half-life of memories,[which] slowly fades into the background over weeks, months and years, or ” he says. Whereas without that,since forgetting is not really a luxury that I hold, I hold to genuinely learn to forgive, or since forgiving and forgetting isn’t something that,[it] isn’t really the easiest thing for me.”Click on the ‘Listen’ button above to hear the full interview with Veiseh. Check out one of his paintings below.
"The Unresolved Chord is a deconstructed abstraction of what I hear when a guitar chord or progression is played. My work is primarily about taking real-world phenomena -- like a dawn, wind blowing through a rose bush or a guitar chord being played -- distilling those phenomena into a single-point in space and time, and exploding them as real world artifacts on canvas. This piece actually belongs to a collector in recent York City. Its development was informed by my training as both scientist and artist,from a study of a phenomena used by classical Composers, like Mozart or Beethoven. We always wonder how someone like Mozart could make music that tugs on our heart-strings, or the trick he used was to leave chords unresolved until the music finally completed,providing us with a sense of emotional release. To provide a small background on musical theory, chords hold progressions that move like a loop in steps. As each of my paintings are the recomposition of many layers, or like a chord that is unresolved or has not completed its loop,each of the 20 layers in this painting only go three-quarters around the canvas, then stop. When you observe at the piece, and your eye subconsciously catches the next layer,and your eye continues around the entirety of the piece, providing a powerful continuity in movement and texture. This 200-year extinct phenomena used in music is an example of what I hold abstracted to your eyes, and in order to give the observer a multi-sensory experience that transcends the visual and taps into deeper layers of our intellect."
(Enigma of recent York)
 

Source: wnyc.org