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Delicacy
I met Susana Mendes Silva in the autumn of 1998 in Sarajevo, in a workshop
integrated in the preparation of a Young Artists Biennale and whose
works would be exhibited in Rome in the spring of 1999. An exceptional
situation in which all participants were suffering the impact of the
city of Sarajevo, a city with an immense symbolic charge and a strong
physical presence, and at the same time they were managing the intensive
interaction within the group of nearly twenty young artists from very
different origins, from the Balkans to Israel, from the Nordic countries
to the island of Cyprus. The potential confrontation of experiences
and sensibilities, exchange of information and opinions, is immense
but to the artist to whom is asked to react and present a project in
a short period of time it is not easy to find the concentration, the
intimacy and the self-centeredness that are needed to the elaboration
of a personal point of view. The work accomplished by Susana Mendes Silva seems to us exemplar in
the way it handles the evidences and the complex and contradictory emotions
imposed by the city. Everyone saw the images of the siege and the bombing of Sarajevo. But
beyond it all they were images and it was a feeling, a feeling of indignation.
Today the concrete experience of the city confirms everything with the
disturbing physical addition of reality. It was right there where the
tanks were. It was right there that the bodies felt down. These were
the holes made by the bullets. These were the craters opened in the
streets. These were the destroyed buildings. This happened. It was real.
It is real. What happened can not have happened. It is there. But the
inadmissible has to give place to the plausible. The impossible reality
has to give place to the possibility of reality. Edin Numankadic, a
visual artist that lived in Sarajevo during all the siege period, insists:
"Time is needed. Time is needed". That's it: life needs time, life is
time. The work that Susana Mendes Silva made for the Rome exhibition is directly
related with the concrete reality of the city physical destruction.
Images of buildings with bullets are printed in fabric, later applied
in embroidery frames. The holes made by the author are in the same spot
as the images of the bullet impacts, and after she roughly mended them.
It is literally about to suture, to re-bound, to heal, to restore the
surface of a brutally forced physical body, the body of the city. I talked with people from Sarajevo that speak about the city as they
spoke about their own body. One would say that they know it like each
one of us knows his/her own body: weaknesses, beauties, ruins, splendors,
details, relives, scars, sparkles. They tell a clinical story like a
history of the events once diagnosed, identified, that has left signs
that can be shown, commented. They also evoke what was not still identified,
the symptoms that have not found their systemic frame. They approach
from terrible or wonderful things that are just about to be able to
be said: there are only a few missing words, that are still only almost
available, a little bit more time. They do not speak about what cannot
be said, like we don't speak about certain things in our bodies, just
because we cannot speak. We do not know what to say. Sometimes we strongly
feel the presence of things that we do not know what to say about them.
It is here that the work of Susana Mendes Silva presented in this book,
the series of photographs "Delicatesse" gains all its meaning. Apparently
it is the reverse approach to the spectacular evidence of the martyr
city, made in the work described before. But this is a complementary
reverse, we could almost say indispensable. It is a work of silence,
of wait, of the suspension of proclamations. A work that is mostly based
in searching time, finding time, giving time. In order to reconstruct
an intimacy. In order to reconstruct a habitability. A silent and lonely
work. It is here that the word "delicacy" gains all its sense of being.
The reflection about intimacy and domestic space, characteristic of
the author work responds here to the circumstance and specific difficulties
of her Sarajevo's experience and maybe to what might be considered a
vital imperative suggested by the city itself: more time, paused time
after the massacre. Delicacy. |