The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989) - Moving through Sound
September 25-29, 2023
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In-person
This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
INSTALLATION | The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989)
Supported by Soulpepper Theatre and the Jackman Humanities Institute, the multimedia installation, The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989), by Lilia Topouzova, Krasimira Butseva, and Julian Chehirian constitutes the public-facing art component of the international academic workshop Authoritarianism: Lives, Legacies, Trauma, led by Professors Joshua Arthurs and Lilia Topouzova.
The installation is built upon 40 interviews conducted by Topouzova and Butseva with survivors from the Bulgarian gulag (1945-1962). The project is the outcome of 20 years of scholarly research and 9 years of artistic collaboration.
Through object, video and sound interventions, the artists recreate the survivors’ homes and evoke the material and psychological space where the interviews unfolded. Staged within them are fragments from oral histories, field recordings and video from former camp sites. The media conflux evokes the unstable boundaries between spaces of home and the psychologically proximate sites of violence.
The public was welcome to view the installation between 1:00 pm and 5:00 pm each day September 25 to September 29, 2023. The organizers held a special event on September 28, 2023, from 5:30 pm to 8 pm including a guided tour of the installation, a live musical performance featuring works by composers who experienced authoritarian regimes, curated by Catherine Lukits, doctoral candidate in History at the University of Toronto and former orchestral cellist, and a panel discussion between the visual artists and Rohan Kulkarni, Director of Education and Community Engagement at Soulpepper Theater.
PUBLIC EVENT: MOVING THROUGH SOUND
On September 28, 2023, from 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm, the organizers hosted a public event exploring authoritarianism through voice and sound. The event included a guided tour of the installation, music by Canadian Opera Company performers and a panel discussion between the visual artists and Rohan Kulkarni, Director of Education and Community Engagement at Soulpepper Theater.
Guests heard the voices of survivors of political violence and listen to the music of composers who survived authoritarian regimes curated by Catherine Lukits, doctoral candidate in History at the University of Toronto and former orchestral cellist.
PROGRAM
5:30 pm: Guided Tour of the Installation
6:00 to 8:00 pm: Welcoming remarks by Professors Joshua Arthurs and Lilia Topouzova
Music Performances
György Ligeti – Sonata for Solo Cello (1948/1953)
Leana Rutt, cello (Canadian Opera Company)
Marcel d’Entremont (Canadian Opera Company)
Panel Discussion
Rohan Kulkarni (Soulpepper Theater) in conversation with the artists and scholars, Lilia Topouzova (University of Toronto), Julian Chehirian (Princeton University), and Krasimira Butseva (London College of Communication, University of the Arts London).
Sponsored by: Soulpepper Theatre, the Jackman Humanities Institute, Centre for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council