Clothing of the Disappeared
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes /All Rights Reserved
"The rivers of Colombia are the world´s largest graveyard."
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes /All Rights Reserved
"The rivers of Colombia are the world´s largest graveyard."
In DRIFTING AWAY my intention is to draw attention to the victims of forced disappearances of the Colombian armed conflict. The project is a response to a number of press reports and news broadcasts which explain how the paramilitaries and the guerrillas torture people, mutilate them and make them disappear by throwing their bodies into a river. This is the source of the saying "the rivers of Colombia are the world´s largest graveyard".
To create an expression of this horrible situation, I decided to submerge pieces of clothing or personal objects of the victims in turbulent water, and then photograph them. I print these photographs on glass to convey the feeling of the ethereal and fragile character of life in those parts of our country.
These very large glass photographs are then displayed upright in the ground, like translucent tombstones in a cemetery. This way people can walk in and around them, and begin to experience the grief of loss. It has been very difficult for the families of the disappeared to feel the healing power of grief, especially since there is often no certainty whether one of the disappeared is actually dead or alive.
I started in Bogotá by looking for clothing or objects belonging to people who had disappeared. Then I continued my search in other areas of conflict, including Eastern Antioquia, Caquetá and Medellín, amongst other places.
During these macabre visits I was able to talk to the families of the victims, who are indeed the voice of all Colombia, clamouring not only for the respect for life, but also for the right to be able to bury their dead. — Erika Diettes
To create an expression of this horrible situation, I decided to submerge pieces of clothing or personal objects of the victims in turbulent water, and then photograph them. I print these photographs on glass to convey the feeling of the ethereal and fragile character of life in those parts of our country.
These very large glass photographs are then displayed upright in the ground, like translucent tombstones in a cemetery. This way people can walk in and around them, and begin to experience the grief of loss. It has been very difficult for the families of the disappeared to feel the healing power of grief, especially since there is often no certainty whether one of the disappeared is actually dead or alive.
I started in Bogotá by looking for clothing or objects belonging to people who had disappeared. Then I continued my search in other areas of conflict, including Eastern Antioquia, Caquetá and Medellín, amongst other places.
During these macabre visits I was able to talk to the families of the victims, who are indeed the voice of all Colombia, clamouring not only for the respect for life, but also for the right to be able to bury their dead. — Erika Diettes
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I first met Colombian photographer Erika Diettes several years ago when she was exhibiting her very moving project SILENCIOS. Silencios was an ambitious project Erika compiled of portraits and testimonials of the Jewish population in Colombia that had survived the concentration camps of Nazi Germany during World War II. Please read more and view photographs of Erika's human rights projects on her website.
2012 Update:
SUDARIOS + Capilla de Los Remedios
Santo Domingo. República Dominicana + Sep 4 - 30, 2012
Oct 22-25, 2009 • Exhibition: Drifting Away
Newark Arts Council Building • 744 Broad St • 6th floor • Newark NJ 07102
View Gallery Installation
Newark Arts Council Building • 744 Broad St • 6th floor • Newark NJ 07102
View Gallery Installation
8 comments:
How beautiful- and telling such a harsh reality.All the elements merging into a powerful message. la
The photos are very moving by themselves, but the way in which they are displayed truly makes it even more profoundly touching. Excellent work.
Maureen
wonderfull photos!.. loved a lot!... good to know your blog!
The photographers you share with us linger in my memory, because their work is so compelling. These are artists who,s work I would not be familiar without your efforts, thank you.
Regardless of the quality of some photographs, they're just the gateway to a much larger, more powerful issue.
This is beautiful and so incredibly tragic at the same time. What an amazing use of photography to convey an emotion that most of us simply cannot express in its purest form: grief.
Una serie realmente curiosa.
Imaginación al poder...
Saludos.
incredible .
is beautiful and the sensation of lost is there .
doesn't even need to read the text to feel that there is something "wrong" with this pieces of cloths .
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