This paper explores the philosophical underpinnings of certain poetic collaborations. It proposes that philosophies of memory underpin how poets think about images; and furthermore that the way in which they think about images shapes how they collaborate. It briefly takes up Freud’s figuration of memory as underpinning the surrealists’ exquisite corpses, then, by way of comparison, how Bergson’s and Deleuze’s figurations of memory shape the collaborative process in curator Lisa Harms’ exhibition, ‘Conversations in Ellipsis’ (31 July - 24 August 2012, SASA Gallery). Gorton argues that collaborative processes are as intimate as style is to the work: ‘there can be no single poetics of collaboration. The ways in which artists collaborate bring out different figurations of memory, different figurations of what a true conversation could ever be.’