Luna Nera made a series of site-responsive installations in the historical
naval base of Kronstadt.
Artists: Gillian McIver, Julian Ronnefeldt, Hilary Powell; Eugene Strelkov
and Mikail Pogarsky of Dirizhable,
and guest artist Eran Tsafrir. Curated by Oleg Yanushevsky and the Centre
for Contemporary Art St Petersburg
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Kronstadt was founded by Peter the Great soon after
the city of St Petersburg, on Kotlin island. The naval base protected
St Petersburg from attack by foreign navies throughout the city's
history.
Kronstadt's sailors were very strong and progressive, and played
major roles in the revolutions of 1905 and 1917. In 1921 they revolted
once again against what they saw as the betrayal of the revolution
by the Bolshevik regime.
Kronstadt maintains a naval base but also many canals, storehouses,
palaces and docks dating from the 17th to the 19th century which
are in various stages of repair. |
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The site-responsive installations by Luna Nera incorporated
ephemeral and found objects, locally sourced. The works were exhibited
in two canalside buildings: the Residenz (former offical's house)
and a former naval storehouse. |

Gillian McIver
Room installation "sails"
Old history books (German, Russian, English) view
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Julian Ronnefeldt
"spy" optical installation
scrap wood, old record players, lenses, lights, matrioshki view
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Hilary Powell
video and object installation "navigating history" and
"SUBmergency"
Bottles, wood, fabric view
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GUEST ARTIST

Eran Tsafrir
Room installation "out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou
heardst my voice"
Photographs, metal, text view
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