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'We have a responsibility to hold on to dark memories'

Using rich imagery to explore themes of the Second World War

February 16, 2012 11:57
Ori Gersht's images of cherry trees planted in contaminated soil in Hiroshima.

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

4 min read

This promises to be a busy year for Israeli-born, London-based artist Ori Gersht. In August, there will be a major survey exhibition of his work at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and in the autumn, his work will be included in a group exhibition at the National Gallery.

But to start the year off, there is the small matter of an exhibition at the Imperial War Museum - his largest solo show to date in a British museum. It might strike people as an unusual venue for contemporary art but as curator Sara Bevin explains, "We were drawn to Ori's work because he uses rich, beautiful imagery to explore how we relate to complex and often dark subject matter, particularly war and conflict." The two films and series of photographs selected have references to the Second World War, a period with which Gersht is fascinated.

He explains: "I see the events that took place between 1939 and 1945 as so significant that they have shaped our lives ever since. They completely changed the world we live in today making it a lot more pluralistic. They raised the bar in relation to our moral standard as human beings. Time is passing and slowly these memories are transforming into myth. I feel that I have some responsibility to hold on to them."

One film explores the story of a Holocaust survivor. "It has to do with a childhood memory that I had," Gersht recalls. When I was young and I was wandering the streets of Tel Aviv, I used to see many people with numbers tattooed on their arms and it was very much integral to the demographic landscape. I still visit Israel frequently and I became aware that all these people are just fading away and disappearing.