Negative Exposure is an immersive installation using visual memory as a primary medium to engage visitors in examining what is seen, unseen, and erased within media representations of war. Moving through a space where images are suggested rather than displayed, the audience confronts an experience of memory reconstruction and self-reflection on the societal impulse to turn away from certain political realities. As viewers navigate altered objects, projected prompts, and contact sheets, the installation challenges visual culture’s fragile, transient nature and asks us to witness the unseen.