Scarecrow
60 х 225 cm
Mannequin; GDR police helmet from the 80s; Linen schirt from 1930s, Zburazh village, Malaritsky district, Belarus.
Buttons: 3D printing: Modernist decorative element from the Museum of Achievements of National Economy, Minsk 1968-2017; Marat Kazey (1929 - 1944) Soviet and Belarusian partisan; A log cabin of a 10th century house Archeological Museum, Brest, Belarus; Ruin of a tower of the 13th-16th centur Navagrudak castle, Belarus.
Blind Search
55 х 125 сm
Lamps of the 60-70s; Linen canvas; led lamps. Photos: Minsk, Vitebsk, Ragachou Gomel, frome the 1941-1944
Seek and Hide
82 х 62 сm
Toys from the 60s-70s from the GDR and Poland; 3D print: hand with a grenade from the monument to Marat Kazej (1959) in Minsk. Hand of a soldier from the memorial complex Brest Hero Fortress (1971), Belarus.
Uladzimir Hramovich: Ruins of Belarus.
Based on the VEHA archive
Ruins make time visible; they signify both memory and the present. Even if their architecture has lost its functional and representative meaning to decay or destruction, their reception is an indication of the contemporary political climate. For Uladzimir Hramovich, materials such as concrete, stone, metal, paper, and color are not just surfaces that reveal traces of history but agents that actively influence it through their presence.
In his artistic work, Hramovich examines ideologies and political movements, using documentary material as a point of departure. In Berlin, cut off from his sources in Belarus on account of his forced exile, he discovered eBay kleinanzeigen for his research. Among other things, he bought a series of pictures from the period of the German occupation of Belarus from 1941 to 1944. The pictures depict destroyed buildings and were taken by German soldiers, eventually winding up in private family archives. The photographs taken by the occupying forces present a perspective that differs widely from the heavily censured Soviet image politics. Hramovich stages the pictures in an installation that resembles the classic display of a local history museum.
The play of perspectives and the quirky presentation of the objects is brought to new heights in his installation “Ruins of Belarus.” While researching online, Hramovich’s algorithm pointed him to relics from the GDR (German Democratic Republic, or in German DDR) that were sold on eBay as nostalgic souvenirs. Among these relics is the GDR police helmet on display here, which reminds Hramovich of the brutal violence with which the regime in Belarus persecutes anyone who does not follow the dominant ideology. He juxtaposes the helmet with a traditional Belarusian linen shirt, evoking an eerie feeling of familiarity and repulsion at once. He also “reconstructed” cats made of plastic, an iconic toy from the former GDR and Poland, in his own manic way: on each cat, Hramovich replaced one paw with the arm of a Soviet monument that commemorates the Great Patriotic War. In this exhibition, he creates a familiar museum setting that also engages with uncanny associations of bodies. Fascinating as they are, these bizarre combinations induce a feeling of profound discomfort.
Hramovich’s technique can be read as a speculative restauration of fragments of various periods, contexts, and ideologies. His manipulated objects are an attempt to reconstruct his own history, and to propose an alternative narrative to hegemonic historic discourses. After the exhibition closes, the pictures will join the eponymous collection “Ruins of Belarus” of the independent VEHA Archive.
Curator: Katharina von Hagenow
Photo credits: Lesia Pcholka