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Archives 2019 Public Art

Sputnik Photos LTA 10: Palimpsest

April 29 – May 31, 2019
  • Brookfield Place, Allen Lambert Galleria
Sputnik Photos, Belarus, Slutsk, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.
Sputnik Photos, Kazakhstan, Semipalatynsk Nuclear Test Site, 2016.
Sputnik Photos, Anaklia, Georgia, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, Minsk, Belarus, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.

Over the course of eight years, from 2008 to 2016, members of the international, Poland-based Sputnik Photos collective set out independently to explore the physical, political, and sociocultural terrain of post-Soviet regions. In the process, the collective built a composite documentary record comprised of several thousand photographs that geographically and thematically span the breadth of the former Soviet Union. Rather than adopting a photojournalist or documentary approach to generate visual narratives, Sputnik Photos have approached their archive conceptually, compiling images into the overarching Lost Territories Archive (LTA) project. LTA is the basis for an ongoing sequence of exhibitions, books, and installations by the collective. Each of the emerging themes touches upon an important aspect of the post-Soviet area.

For the installation at Brookfield Place, a select number of large-scale images revolve around notions of palimpsest. Of Ancient Greek origin, the word “palimpsest” derives from the concept of “again rubbed smooth,” referring to writing material where the original text has been partially erased and written over again. Of particular relevance to this project, the word also has geographic associations to a place or landscape where something new is imposed over traces of past histories. It implies an interaction between the physical terrain and human impact, evoking layered and intertwined geological histories and cultural identities. A palimpsest both reveals and conceals its history. The various republics that remained after the collapse of the Soviet Union have all been subjected to continual restructuring and renaming over time. While such changes are often chronicled by maps and are evident in the physical environment, their psychological implications require tenacious effort to trace and recover.

Throughout Sputnik Photos’ installation, references to traces of the past overlaid with manifestations of the present are repeatedly made visible, revealing the remnants of the former Soviet Union and the after-effects of its desired utopian systems. Anaklia, Georgia (2013), for instance, features an image of an unfinished viewing tower in the midst of a barren landscape. It points to a not uncommon type of ruin that can be found across the post-Soviet empire, based on abandoned political edifices that were initially constructed at great cost. Yangiabad, Uzbekistan (2015) depicts a broken bridge over a river in Yangiabad—a town built by the Soviets in the 1950s after the discovery of its rich uranium deposits. Extensive mining continued until the collapse of the USSR in 1991, leaving behind high levels of uranium in the water, and much of the infrastructure in ill repair. References to man-made environmental impact are made in Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, Kazakhstan (2016), which depicts the Soviet’s primary testing location for nuclear weapons. The site, located close to a small town, left the region exposed to levels of radiation that were kept hidden by authorities until the site closed in 1991.

Other presented images at Brookfield Place feature censored graffiti, an abandoned broadcasting company, images of border architecture, and various ad-hoc responses to different geological and socio-cultural issues. Elements of both real and imagined scenes are included, such as a neglected museum display, and a faded mural depicting a resort on the Black Sea. Every image speaks to some kind of ghostly imprint—whether ecological, physic, or corporeal—of a convulsive past that lingers in the present. Displayed on free-standing walls situated throughout the Allen Lambert Galleria, these images resonate with the surrounding architecture on various levels. In the context of the palimpsest, the building shares a layered past: the Galleria integrates a stone facade taken from a nearby 1845 structure that housed various banks before it was demolished. Dismantled stone by stone, the facade was then reassembled at Brookfield Place, existing as a remnant of the past. These surroundings also serve as stark contrast to this body of work. The open atrium, often described as a “crystal cathedral of commerce,” epitomizes a thriving financial environment, placing it at odds with these images that capture the remnants of a fallen Empire and its failed utopic plans.

Sputnik Photos is Andrej Balco, Jan Brykczynski, Andrei Liankevich, Michal Luczak, Rafal Milach, Adam Panczuk, and Agnieszka Rayss.

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Carrie Mae Weems Anointed

460 King St W
Archives 2019 Public Art

Nadine Stijns A Nation Outside a Nation

The Bentway
Archives 2019 Public Art

Peter Funch 42nd & Vanderbilt

Billboards at Church and McGill St, Billboards at Victoria and Dundas St, Billboards at Church and Lombard St
Archives 2019 Public Art

Sputnik Photos LTA 10: Palimpsest

Brookfield Place
Archives 2019 Public Art

Nadia Belerique above and below and so on forever

Castle Frank Bus Station
Archives 2019 Public Art

Susan Dobson Back/Fill

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 Public Art

Esther Hovers False Positives

Harbourfront Centre, Parking Pavillion
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carmen Winant XYZ-SOB-ABC

Lansdowne and College Billboards
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carrie Mae Weems Slow Fade To Black

Metro Hall
Archives 2019 Public Art

Bianca Salvo The Universe Makers

Osgoode Subway Station
Archives 2019 Public Art

Zinnia Naqvi Yours to Discover

PAMA
Archives 2019 Public Art

Mario Pfeifer If you end up with the story you started with, then you’re not listening along the way

The Power Plant façade
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carrie Mae Weems Scenes & Take

TIFF Bell Lightbox
Archives 2019 Public Art

Elizabeth Zvonar Milky Way Smiling

Westin Harbour Castle
Archives 2019 Public Art

Sanaz Mazinani Not Elsewhere

Archives 2019 Public Art
OverviewCorePublic ArtOpen CallArtists
  • Overview
  • Core
  • Public Art
  • Open Call
  • Artists
Archives 2019 Public Art

Sputnik Photos LTA 10: Palimpsest

April 29 – May 31, 2019
  • Brookfield Place, Allen Lambert Galleria
Sputnik Photos, Belarus, Slutsk, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.
Sputnik Photos, Kazakhstan, Semipalatynsk Nuclear Test Site, 2016.
Sputnik Photos, Anaklia, Georgia, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, Minsk, Belarus, 2013.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.
Sputnik Photos, LTA 10: Palimpsest, Installation at Brookfield Place, Toronto, 2019. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid. Courtesy CONTACT, the artists.

Over the course of eight years, from 2008 to 2016, members of the international, Poland-based Sputnik Photos collective set out independently to explore the physical, political, and sociocultural terrain of post-Soviet regions. In the process, the collective built a composite documentary record comprised of several thousand photographs that geographically and thematically span the breadth of the former Soviet Union. Rather than adopting a photojournalist or documentary approach to generate visual narratives, Sputnik Photos have approached their archive conceptually, compiling images into the overarching Lost Territories Archive (LTA) project. LTA is the basis for an ongoing sequence of exhibitions, books, and installations by the collective. Each of the emerging themes touches upon an important aspect of the post-Soviet area.

For the installation at Brookfield Place, a select number of large-scale images revolve around notions of palimpsest. Of Ancient Greek origin, the word “palimpsest” derives from the concept of “again rubbed smooth,” referring to writing material where the original text has been partially erased and written over again. Of particular relevance to this project, the word also has geographic associations to a place or landscape where something new is imposed over traces of past histories. It implies an interaction between the physical terrain and human impact, evoking layered and intertwined geological histories and cultural identities. A palimpsest both reveals and conceals its history. The various republics that remained after the collapse of the Soviet Union have all been subjected to continual restructuring and renaming over time. While such changes are often chronicled by maps and are evident in the physical environment, their psychological implications require tenacious effort to trace and recover.

Throughout Sputnik Photos’ installation, references to traces of the past overlaid with manifestations of the present are repeatedly made visible, revealing the remnants of the former Soviet Union and the after-effects of its desired utopian systems. Anaklia, Georgia (2013), for instance, features an image of an unfinished viewing tower in the midst of a barren landscape. It points to a not uncommon type of ruin that can be found across the post-Soviet empire, based on abandoned political edifices that were initially constructed at great cost. Yangiabad, Uzbekistan (2015) depicts a broken bridge over a river in Yangiabad—a town built by the Soviets in the 1950s after the discovery of its rich uranium deposits. Extensive mining continued until the collapse of the USSR in 1991, leaving behind high levels of uranium in the water, and much of the infrastructure in ill repair. References to man-made environmental impact are made in Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, Kazakhstan (2016), which depicts the Soviet’s primary testing location for nuclear weapons. The site, located close to a small town, left the region exposed to levels of radiation that were kept hidden by authorities until the site closed in 1991.

Other presented images at Brookfield Place feature censored graffiti, an abandoned broadcasting company, images of border architecture, and various ad-hoc responses to different geological and socio-cultural issues. Elements of both real and imagined scenes are included, such as a neglected museum display, and a faded mural depicting a resort on the Black Sea. Every image speaks to some kind of ghostly imprint—whether ecological, physic, or corporeal—of a convulsive past that lingers in the present. Displayed on free-standing walls situated throughout the Allen Lambert Galleria, these images resonate with the surrounding architecture on various levels. In the context of the palimpsest, the building shares a layered past: the Galleria integrates a stone facade taken from a nearby 1845 structure that housed various banks before it was demolished. Dismantled stone by stone, the facade was then reassembled at Brookfield Place, existing as a remnant of the past. These surroundings also serve as stark contrast to this body of work. The open atrium, often described as a “crystal cathedral of commerce,” epitomizes a thriving financial environment, placing it at odds with these images that capture the remnants of a fallen Empire and its failed utopic plans.

Sputnik Photos is Andrej Balco, Jan Brykczynski, Andrei Liankevich, Michal Luczak, Rafal Milach, Adam Panczuk, and Agnieszka Rayss.

Curated by Bonnie Rubenstein

Carrie Mae Weems Anointed

460 King St W
Archives 2019 Public Art

Nadine Stijns A Nation Outside a Nation

The Bentway
Archives 2019 Public Art

Peter Funch 42nd & Vanderbilt

Billboards at Church and McGill St, Billboards at Victoria and Dundas St, Billboards at Church and Lombard St
Archives 2019 Public Art

Sputnik Photos LTA 10: Palimpsest

Brookfield Place
Archives 2019 Public Art

Nadia Belerique above and below and so on forever

Castle Frank Bus Station
Archives 2019 Public Art

Susan Dobson Back/Fill

Daniels Building U of T
Archives 2019 Public Art

Esther Hovers False Positives

Harbourfront Centre, Parking Pavillion
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carmen Winant XYZ-SOB-ABC

Lansdowne and College Billboards
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carrie Mae Weems Slow Fade To Black

Metro Hall
Archives 2019 Public Art

Bianca Salvo The Universe Makers

Osgoode Subway Station
Archives 2019 Public Art

Zinnia Naqvi Yours to Discover

PAMA
Archives 2019 Public Art

Mario Pfeifer If you end up with the story you started with, then you’re not listening along the way

The Power Plant façade
Archives 2019 Public Art

Carrie Mae Weems Scenes & Take

TIFF Bell Lightbox
Archives 2019 Public Art

Elizabeth Zvonar Milky Way Smiling

Westin Harbour Castle
Archives 2019 Public Art

Sanaz Mazinani Not Elsewhere

Archives 2019 Public Art

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CONTACT is a Toronto based non-profit organization dedicated to exhibiting, analyzing and celebrating photography and lens-based media through an annual festival that takes place every May.

Land Acknowledgement

CONTACT acknowledges that we live and work on the traditional territory of many nations, including the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples, and that this land is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. CONTACT is committed to promoting Indigenous voices; to generating spaces for ongoing, meaningful, and creative Indigenous-settler dialogue; and to continuous learning about our place on this land.

Anti-Oppression

CONTACT is committed to the ongoing development of meaningful anti-oppressive practice on all levels. This includes our continuing goal of augmenting and maintaining diverse representation, foregrounding varied and under-represented voices and perspectives via our public platform (the Festival and all related programs), as well as continually examining the structures of power and decision-making within the organization itself. We aim to actively learn, grow, and embody the values of inclusivity, equity, and accessibility in all facets of the institution, as an ever-evolving process.