Munich-based Canadian artist Anne Mason-Hoerter investigates memory’s fragility through fragmented plant photography. Using up to 100 images taken within 24 hours, she reconstructs plants from memory, creating singular, ephemeral artworks. Her process explores the distortion of recollection and nature’s delicate presence, questioning how memories shape perception. Mason-Hoerter’s work probes the emotional layers behind visual remembrance, emphasizing the transient relationship between human experience, time, and the natural world.