Difficult Pasts. Connected Worlds
With the beginning of Russia's war in Ukraine, the past has
returned in Eastern Europe, changing from something distant into a
present-day disaster for millions of people. The invasion that
started in 2014 with Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk was often
dismissed by the international community, but has now grown into a
situation that is affecting the whole world. This war hits Eastern
Europe most alarmingly, reviving many silences, unhealed wounds and
unprocessed memories of the totalitarian past.
"Difficult Pasts. Connected Worlds" includes works by artists from
the three Baltic countries, Ukraine, Poland, Finland and the
Netherlands. The experiences the works evoke are ones that are
often forgotten or ignored, excluded from official histories.
Artists included in the exhibition narrate those experiences
through individual stories, while evoking broader layers of
cultural memory. What is the place of these stories in the present?
How could we integrate them in our understanding of history? What
do they change in our perception of the world around us? Overcoming
local and national borders, the exhibition calls for reflection on
the relationships between difficult pasts and their impact today
through the perspective of a shared history by opening dialogue,
forging connections and foregrounding solidarities between the
different difficult histories.
We are used to thinking about past times through the lens of national histories, with their selective, smoothed and linear narrations, instead of the plural and messy stories shared in daily life. The difficult sides of these histories have often been neglected; instead, comforting stories are told that stress positive narratives and ways of overcoming challenges. This exhibition brings together difficult and often-silenced aspects of pasts that include violent conflicts, traumatic losses and their long-term legacies. The difficult pasts addressed here involve recent warfare and histories of colonialism, the uneasy balances between modes of survival and collaboration and the ways that post-soviet societies have found to cope with the shadows of the past.
The exhibition was first shown in 2020 at the Latvian National Museum of Art in Riga, as part of Communicating Difficult Pasts, an international project which engages with the uncomfortable and often forgotten sides of history in order to understand their influences in the Baltic region and neighboring countries. It is now organized within the framework of From Complicated Past Towards Shared Futures, a collaboration between the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art in Riga, the National Gallery of Art in Vilnius (Lithuanian National Museum of Art), OFF-Biennale in Budapest, Muzeum Sztuki in Lodz and Malmö Art Museum. The project seeks to explore and communicate the entanglements of past and present, searching for new ways in which art and culture can raise awareness of these issues for the wider public and influence current realities.
More information about the exhibition is available on the online platform of the project "From Complicated Pasts Towards Shared Futures"
Curators: Ieva Astahovska, Margaret Tali, Eglė Mikalajūnė
Participating artists: Anastasia Sosunova, Eléonore de Montesquiou, Jaana Kokko, Laima Kreivytė, Lia Dostlieva & Andrii Dostliev, Matīss Gricmanis & Ona Juciūtė, Quinsy Gario & Mina Ouaouirst, Paulina Pukytė, Ülo Pikkov, Vika Eksta, Zuzanna Hertzberg.