During the 1960s and 70s, thousands of monuments commemorating the  Second World War – called ‘Spomeniks’ – were built throughout the former  Yugoslavia; striking monumental sculptures, with an angular geometry  echoing the shapes of flowers, crystals, and macro-views of viruses or  DNA. In the 1980s the Spomeniks still attracted millions of visitors  from the Eastern bloc; today they are largely neglected and unknown,  their symbolism lost and unwanted. Antwerp-based photographer Jan Kempenaers travelled the Balkans photographing these eerie objects, presented in his book as a powerful typological series. The beauty and mystery of  the isolated, crumbling Spomeniks informs Kempenaer’s enquiry into  memory, found beauty, and whether former monuments can function as pure  sculpture.

During the 1960s and 70s, thousands of monuments commemorating the Second World War – called ‘Spomeniks’ – were built throughout the former Yugoslavia; striking monumental sculptures, with an angular geometry echoing the shapes of flowers, crystals, and macro-views of viruses or DNA. In the 1980s the Spomeniks still attracted millions of visitors from the Eastern bloc; today they are largely neglected and unknown, their symbolism lost and unwanted. Antwerp-based photographer Jan Kempenaers travelled the Balkans photographing these eerie objects, presented in his book as a powerful typological series. The beauty and mystery of the isolated, crumbling Spomeniks informs Kempenaer’s enquiry into memory, found beauty, and whether former monuments can function as pure sculpture.

Jan 23rd at 8PM / 11 notes
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