A documentary archive made with the public, not simply about it.
Memory Map Project begins with a simple belief: places are not passive backgrounds. They hold the traces of what people have lived through there.
The project asks what photography cannot answer alone: what does this place mean to the people who keep passing through it?
Along the Mystic River, small public markers invite anyone to leave a memory tied to a precise location. Those responses are reviewed and connected to photographs, portraits, field recordings, and future public presentations.
The work is intentionally accessible at street level and rigorous as an archive. It preserves everyday testimony without forcing participants into a formal interview, and it treats ordinary landscapes as worthy of sustained documentary attention.
What it can become
• a public memory archive
• a photographic and oral history project
• an exhibition or book
• a collaboration with museums, libraries, schools, watershed groups, and local communities
• a replicable chapter-based model for other places
Chapter One: Mystic River
The river is the first field site: a corridor of commuting, recreation, industry, ecology, neighborhood change, migration, and private ritual. Future chapters can follow other rivers, streets, neighborhoods, or cities.