LISBON.- Cristina’s History takes as its starting point the story of four generations of a branch of
Mikael Levin’s family, of which Cristina is a descendant.
It unfolds from the mid-19th century to our own times, and streches from the town of Zgierg in
central Poland to the west-african nation of
Guinea-Bissau, by way of Lisbon. These three places,
photographed
between 2003 and 2005, correspond in each case to a narrative which
interweaves
the lives of the characters and historical events to which
those biographies are linked. As the trajectory
of a Jewish family
through modern European history, a journey in which each new hope is met
with
invariable disappointment, Cristina’s History challenges the idea
of continuous progress. This does not,
however, mean ceding to
nostalgia. nor is it an affirmation of the notion of an ineradicable
identity.
What this work does do is attests to the possibility of
inventing one’s life based on, but without being
dependent of tradition.
Although the story – or at least the idea of a story – no doubt
determined the
photographic project, the text and the images in a fact
move along parallel lines. It is through the gap
that the relationships
are etablished; between the different histories and the images of the
present,
between the different lives described and the places where they
are not, or between the narrative space,
most often closed and
familial, and the visible space, open and public.
From such simplicity shaped by numerous complexities emerges a poetic work cast as a documentary.
It is a profound autobiographical
work, though the author never appears. The space is configured
around
three projection rooms corresponding to the territories represented.
Within each room, each
cycle lasts approximately fifteen minutes and
comprises some sixty images. a voice-over tells the
story. In the rooms
devoted to Zgierz and guinea-Bissau, two projectors are mounted back to
back
on a central pivot. The images rotate around the room, like the
beams of a lighthouse, stretching and
bending to the contours of the
walls. In the Lisbon room, three projectors cast their images
alternately
at fixed locations.
Artist Statement: “I met Cristina da silva-schwarz in guinea-Bissau in 2003. Four generations back our ancestor, Isuchaar szwarc, a renowned Jewish scholar, lived in Zgierz,
in central Poland. In his lifetime
Isuchaar saw his small medieval town transformed by industrialization.
He died as the nazis exterminated the Jewish communities. Isuchaar’s
eldest son, samuel, settled in
Lisbon. a successful mining engineer also
known for his scholarship, samuel lived in Portugal during
the waning
decades of its colonial epoch. samuel’s daughter Clara settled in
Portuguese guinea in 1947.
There she and her husband played a prominent
role in the anti-colonial movement. since
guinea-Bissau’s independence,
Carlos, their youngest son, has devoted his life to the agricultural
development of this impoverished nation.
Cristina is Carlos’ daughter. I had always heard of this accomplished branch of my family. It occurred to me that their lives were
an embodiment of modernity’s
positivist belief in mobility and progress. Jewish families are often
characterized by patterns of dispersal and migration, patterns that have
of late come to characterize
the world population in general. While my
images are specific, my intent is to go beyond the narrow
identifications of any particular community. It is the tension between
the local and the global that
interests me.
The condition of multiplicity, wandering, and exile, as shown in this story, suggests some principles
for an alternative foundation for
cultural identification, based on tolerance and shared patterns of
experience.”
— Mikael Levin Born in 1954 in New York where he now lives, Mikael Levin has also lived in Israel and France. His
work Notes fromthe Periphery was
presented at the 2003 Venice Biennale. That same year his work
was
presented in a solo exhibition at the Bibliothèque nationale de France.
In 2008, gilles Peyroulet
& Cie (Paris) presented his exhibition
Seuil/ Treshold. Mikael Levin has also published War Story
(Kehayoff,
1997).
|
quinta-feira, 10 de setembro de 2009
Mikael Levin's Cristina's History
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