Memorial in the Closet: A Cognitive Reading of the Kordon Platform Through Camera Lucida

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Date

2025

Authors

İlke Hiçsönmezler
Ahenk Yılmaz

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SAGE Publications Inc.

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HYBRID

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Abstract

This article examines how urban installations oscillate between being perceived as ordinary furniture and as memorials depending on the observer’s cognitive engagement. Focusing on the Kordon Platform in İzmir the study draws on Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida particularly the concepts of punctum and studium to explore how memory is activated through visual and cognitive interaction with design. Although grounded in theoretical frameworks the argument is developed through a practice-based analysis of a single case. Adopting an observer-centered phenomenological approach the study combines in-depth field observations with a semi-structured interview with the designer. It investigates how commemorative meaning arises not solely from form but through processes of perception and cultural association. The marble blocks often perceived as urban fixtures gain mnemonic significance when viewers reinterpret their spatial and narrative cues. Integrating theories of cultural memory photography and cognition the article shows how abstract memorials resist fixed narratives and enable individualized remembrance. © 2025 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Camera Lucida, Cognition, Cultural Memory, Memorial, Roland Barthes, Visual Perception

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Space and Culture

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