| | | | © Patrick Galbats | | | | HIT ME ONE MORE TIME | | 10 March ‐ 29 April, 2018 | | Opening, Saturday March 10th at 11.00 am | | | | CNA Centre national de l'audiovisuel 1b, rue du Centenaire, LU-3475 Dudelange T +352-522424-1 [email protected] www.cna.lu Tue-Sun 10am-10pm | |
| | | | | | © Patrick Galbats | | | | In recent years, Patrick Galbats undertook a series of trips to Hungary, travelling the length and breadth of the country to weave a narrative with multiple points of entry. One starting point was his Hungarian grandfather, Imre Miklos Galbats, who was forced to flee his native land in 1944, to become a stateless refugee who even scribbled the Hungarian national anthem into his passport. For Patrick Galbats this was the beginning of an immersive exploration of his Hungarian family roots, an enterprise that would rapidly come face to face with the complex history of a country in constant transition and with the gradual resurgence of nationalism since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Adopting a long-term approach, nourished with Hungarian poetry and literature, Patrick Galbats has criss-crossed this multi-layered topography to build - through the prism of his own history - a visual narrative that comprises three sections. The opening sequence is a series of infamous landscapes along the Serbo-Hungarian border, which, with the building of a 175 kilometre-long fence, embody Hungary's political refusal to welcome refugees onto its soil. Here the migrant crisis is evoked not through the faces of refugees, but by showing the instruments of this political violence: surveillance cameras, barbed wire fences, observation posts, border checkpoints... From these cracked edges, Patrick Galbats continues his exploration across towns and villages highlighting settings that take us back and forth in time, revealing dominant beliefs and ideologies. Monuments, turuls, multinational banners, flags, religious symbols, hussars, commemoration marches, tattoos, farmsteads, and socialist-style buildings permeate – to a more or less unexpected degree - the landscape and those who live in it. From the nostalgia for a Greater Hungary – to the resurgence of the Fascist threat, the succession of images tangibly points up an amalgam that is emerging at another level fueled by movements who readily exploit underlying fears such as the dilution of national identity, Islamic terrorism and the impact of globalization on living standards. A third section – which unfolds in a more encyclopaedic fashion – attempts to decode this compact of signs and symbols – ranging from the anecdotic to the analytical – by way of a compilation of twelve photos accompanied by texts written by the journalist Joël Le Pavous. Beyond a simple act of description, Patrick Galbats' "Hit me one more time" addresses the human condition in a changing world more as a questioning of our own blinkered viewpoint in the face of a spectacle fraught with consequences. With the support of Ministère de la Culture, Fonds Culturel National and Bourse CNA – Aide à la création et à la diffusion en photographie | | | | | | © Patrick Galbats | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to [email protected] © 4 Mar 2018 photography-now.com Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke [email protected] T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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