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Friday, February 20, 2026 |
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| New exhibition explores the 'sleight of hand' within our subconscious |
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NEW YORK, NY.- albertz benda is pleased to present You Shouldve Been There, a group exhibition curated by Aaron Levi Garvey that examines how memory both illuminates and obscures our understanding of lived experience. The exhibition brings together a diverse group of artists whose works explore the fluid, unreliable, and often poetic nature of recollection.
Just as trompe-lil in painting can fool ones eye into believing illusions are reality, memories can also perform their own sleight of hand which causes us to question ourselves and our recollections of individual and collective events. From dates and times of formative experiences with family and friends to professional life events and day-to-day chores, our memories are collected and stored deep in our subconscious constantly. While we often relive memories through conversations and interactions with one another, the slightest mishaps in our recollections can shape new and authentic seeming reconstructions which fill memory gaps. These vague moments which are filled subconsciously fabricated anecdotes distort the entire instance being recalled. Perhaps they come in the form of exaggeration and outrageous storytelling or hazy and obscured details which seemed minor at the time of the event but alter the iterated versions recounting completely.
Memory trompe-lil parallels the phenomenon of time-slice errors, where our minds recall the substance and details of an event with accuracy, but distort the sequencing and moments in time. The memory is realhowever the timing or places are not. These errors reflect the brain's struggle to track the sequence and timing of our experiences and sew them together with other lived events throughout our lives. Unlike a computer, our memory doesn't come with time-stamped entries, and it is up to us to recall our direct experiences as accurately and acutely as possible. Instead, it reconstructs events based on context, emotional cues, and associations. Sometimes, that reconstruction goes slightly off blending one experience into the time frame of another.
This exhibition explores how memories can often be deceiving and create mythologies from our subconscious, and further questions our own introspection when reminiscing of times passed or life-events that we experience. While memories can often be sentimental and fond or worrisome and disturbing, their records are rarely perfect and not without a bias. Our recall of moments or feelings of a time passed become slightly skewed by our own hopes and wishes. They bend and reshape, presenting us with images that feel vivid and true, yet are subtly altered and misplaced. These distortions are not failures but part of memorys creative process to place more of ourselves within these experiences, blending perception, imagination, desire and ambition together. The works on view reflect how we store, retrieve, and sometimes disremember events and our individual pasts and invite us to consider how personal recollections overlap with collective histories. How our emotions influence what we remember, and how time itself can shift the scale and sequence of events. This exhibition asks visitors to consider when memory is authentic or when it is inaccurate, and what truths can we find, not in the accuracy of the moment, but in the poetic introspection and act of remembering.
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Today's News
February 20, 2026
Everard Auctions presents fine and decorative art from distinguished Southern estates and collections, Feb. 24-26
Frick appoints new John Updike Curator
Quinn's Feb. 24 Fine & Decorative Arts auction features American, European, Asian and Modern arts
Exquisite Thomas Lawrence portrait discovered in Paris after decades
The James Museum mourns the passing of Executive Director Robin Nicholson
Clinton's saxophone, Mao-signed album, Steve Jobs suit headline U.S. 250th auction
Hauser & Wirth announces representation of the Estate of Carol Rama alongside Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi
The Whitney's first secretary returns: Mabel Dwight's landmark solo debut opens in New York
Elizabeth Neel navigates the 'guts' of perception in new Tribeca solo show
Raw realism and rural aesthetics: 'Purgatory' group show debuts at GR Gallery
Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation unveils dual exhibitions in Eschborn
Radical, personal, political: Belvedere 21 opens major Sue Williams retrospective 'WHAT NOW'
Mark Arbeit retrospective at Kaune Gallery traces 40 years of photographic mastery
'Liquid Tongues' reimagines deafness as sensory potential at the Polish Pavilion
Dulwich Picture Gallery announces appointment of three new Trustees
Haus am Waldsee presents Gianna Surangkanjanajai, Rey Akdogan, and Luciano Pecoits
Kate Hargrave's timeless visions of youth debut at Karma in New York
Immersive 4K archive reclaims Dahomey's sacred rituals and history
Peter Frie's dreamlike landscapes and bronzes arrive at Galerie Forsblom in Helsinki
Claudia Bitrán's epic lo-fi remake premieres at Cristin Tierney Gallery
Melissa Brown's 'Window Shopping' debuts at Derek Eller Gallery
Julie Schenkelberg's 'Looking Glass' opens at Asya Geisberg
Kin Museum of Contemporary Art presents its 2026 program
New exhibition explores the 'sleight of hand' within our subconscious
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