Categorie... - Searching For- Margo Von Tesse In-all
He pulled up the system monitor.
“You’re the first to look in All Categories. The others always chose ‘Video’ or ‘Audio.’ They never understood. I was never in the art. I was in the act of being searched for.”
The door to the server room was still closed. The security camera feed showed an empty hallway. But on the main terminal, a new line had appeared below the dark search box. Found: 1 result. He didn’t click it.
She wasn’t in video. She wasn’t in audio, text, or image. Searching for- Margo Von Tesse in-All Categorie...
No video player opened. No audio waveform. Instead, a single line of plain text appeared, typed in real time, letter by letter, like a ghost at a terminal:
Instead, he whispered to the empty basement server room, “Who were you?”
And then, one by one, each query string changed—not overwritten, but corrected . Every search for every artist, every term, every forgotten name now included the same appended phrase: He pulled up the system monitor
He clicked the file.
He didn’t have to.
The cursor hesitated. Then:
Leo’s hands hovered over the keyboard. His pulse thrummed in his temples. “Margo?” he typed.
And in All Categories, the search never really ends.
“In the silence between your keystrokes. In the moment before a search fails. In the category you didn’t know existed until you needed it. I’m not data, Leo. I’m the search itself.” I was never in the art
The Ghost in the Grid Logline: A digital archivist searching for a forgotten performance artist discovers that some searches return more than data—they return echoes. The prompt blinked on the terminal for the third night in a row. Searching for: Margo Von Tesse In: All Categories... Leo leaned back in his chair, the cracked leather exhaling with him. He’d been a digital archivist for the Werther-Boyd Museum for twelve years—long enough to know that “All Categories” was a lie. The museum’s deep storage held 73 petabytes of unsorted media: lost films, broken web pages, deleted social accounts, forgotten art projects from the early wilds of the internet. But Margo Von Tesse was different.