anita līcis-ribak's blog

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04
Jan 2011

City on the Sea: Fragments of (Brief Returns to) Rīga, Latvia

After years of shooting, months of brewing, and hours of installation, today opened my new photography show at the Hosmer Art Gallery in Northampton. Here is a small preview, accompanied by my introduction to the show. Please come and enjoy! I hope to see many of you at the reception on Saturday, January 15th, from 2 to 4:30 p.m.

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When I am asked where I come from, I answer “Latvia”. More often than not, another question follows: where is Latvia? Perhaps it is because it is such a new country that its humble contours, shaped like a windblown dress, haven't yet been drawn on some of the world's maps. And yet, Latvia has been independent for 20 years now, and is part of NATO and the European Union. It has sent out its sons and daughters into the world, but your chances of running into one of them are quite slim: there are only 2 million of us.

The wind that blows 'the dress' arrives from the Baltic Sea, in Northeast Europe - half of Latvia's border is sculpted by its sandy coastline, pinned down by tall proud pine trees and sparingly sprinkled with amber, Latvia’s national stone. The wind is bone-chilling in the long gray winters, fresh and playful in the bright explosion of green-blue summers, with their long days and short nights. Before Latvia regained its independence from the USSR in 1990, this Baltic wind had for a long time been promising freedom, planting daring thoughts of escape into the young minds, and strengthening the resilience of those still left behind after the storms of revolutions and uprising, world wars and stalinist purges had swept through, and quieted down.

Like all European countries between Germany and Russia, Latvia was subject to politically motivated land disputes between the large neighboring empires, and Latvia’s people subjected to hundreds of years of foreign aggression, occupation, and displacement. The last of those years were marked by the forceful annexation of Latvia by the USSR, which lasted from 1940 until the singing revolution of 1990, and the massive deportations to Siberian labor camps following the annexation. Remarkably, Latvian identity, its language, the strong tradition of singing, and millions of songs (many of them forbidden during the soviet times), survived. Even after losing some of its most beautiful buildings to WWII bombings and to destructive Soviet nationalization policies, Latvia’s capital Rīga, perched on the river Daugava where it meets the Baltic Sea waters, remains a rich hub of European culture, complete with an ancient fortress, medieval cathedrals, and cobbled street labyrinths, with entire streets graced by architectural jewels of Art Nuovo and National Romanticism. 

But centuries of upheavals have also left the country bleeding. Latvia was the worst hit country in the world in the recent economic recession, its GDP shrinking more than 20%, and the unemployment rates going up from 5 to almost 20 percent in only 2 years. Life expectancy for men has gone down to 67 years, not least of it due to alcoholism. Last time I was in Latvia, in September of 2009, when I took most of these photographs, dozens of schools and hospitals were closing; salaries, pensions, and all types of government subsidies were being slashed; half-built buildings were standing abandoned. Latvia had entered into deep “austerity mode”.

These photographs are of the city of Rīga, and its ordinary people caught in ordinary situations. They are taken in-the-moment, each a spontaneous slice of time and place, as I was reacting to a certain situation or emotion. With these images I would like to convey the richness and the strength of my countrymen's spirit, as it transcends the time and place, aching under strain facing the unknown, and to show that loneliness can coexist with comradeship, agony with repose, vulnerability with strength, passion with nostalgia, doubt with lightness, and the mundane with the extraordinary.

Filed under  //   Latvia   Northampton   Riga   exhibition   photography  
24
Sep 2010

HERE

One of the most exciting artistic highlights of this past summer for me was a group art exhibition, entitled HERE, where I showed one of my new pieces, Letters Between the (Coast) Lines.  The exhibit took place at Northampton's A.P.E. at Window gallery in July and August.  It was collaboratively curated by a group of all 8 participating artists, who were brought together by Cancade Bradbury-Carllin, a talented and driven curator and artist.  The artists, all with strong connections to the Pioneer Valley are:  Sarah BlissCandace Bradbury-CarlinSally CurcioKaren DolmanisthElizabeth DuffyTaiga ErmansonsTheresa Rock, and myself.  I was awe-struck with the richness, inventiveness, and the power of each one of them, and how those qualities translate, in very individual and uniquely profound ways, into their work.  The exhibit included a video installation, an ongoing performance, sculpture, painting, drawing, installation, and photography.  

I started working on assembly pieces made of fragments of my photographs printed on airmail paper.  Printing on airmail paper became a battle I was bent on winning.  I tinkered with my ink jet printer, its settings, and with many different ways to feed it this barely-there paper.  Finally, after several days of experimentation, after the pile of used ink cartridges and discarded precious sheets paper had grown to unsetling proportions, I had finally found the way, and streamlined the process.  

The thought of printing on such a fragile ephemeral material came to me when I started contemplating the meaning of "here" for me, in preparation for the show.  
The following is my artist's statement for the exhibition, HERE. 

"I've been pondering the meaning of HERE ever since this group of artists came together to produce the exhibit, HERE. Is it a destination? A permanent address? A place along a path? A state of being? I think for me, here and now, its meaning is hinged around my experiences of someone who is living far away from her homeland, and from many people close to her, and who has adopted a language she learned well into her 20s. I have, through the years, kept exchanging letters with those I left behind. And these handwritten letters have become a bond that has kept me close to them, and what has nurtured our relationships. 

I am currently working on a series of photographs printed, in fragments, on airmail paper and envelopes. Both the content of the images, and the method of their presentation refer to the ephemeral, fragile and sometimes hidden quality of our existence, relationships and of the ever evolving sense of self, while representing a kind of a bridge between the different lives I have lived, on three different continents, a bridge to "here". 

With its lightness and functionality, airmail paper becomes a fragmented canvas for the stories of our lives, the snippets from which we learn about each other. The air and the water in the printed images becomes the carrier of life, a potent pregnant messenger and sustainer of life itself."

Thank you so much, to all of you who came to see the show, and to those who couldn't make it, but wanted to, for all your wonderful feedback, your energy and inspiration!  

Love, 

anita 
Licisribak_coastlines_2010-08-
Letters Between the (Coast) Lines - I  (Diptych)
Chennai, India.  Indian Ocean, Sunrise.  February 2010 - Wellfleet MA, USA.  Atlantic Ocean, Sunset.  June 2010 
Digital photography on air mail paper assembly 
Each panel 22"x30"

Filed under  //   A.P.E. Gallery   Northampton   art   exhibition   photography