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When the hawk comes

28july15september

gallery

A special video screening is part of our main event on the platform, featuring an exclusive soundtrack created by Ekaterina Steppe and Tatiana Stepanova specially for an artwork by Lilia Li Mi Yan and Katherina Sadovsky.

The emphasis on the sound work invites a new appreciation of video as an audio-visual art form, providing an opportunity to engage the imagination and rethink the significance of sonic memories.

A short video by artists Lilia Li-Mi-Yan and Katherina Sadovsky is a sad, poetic metaphor for what is happening in the world today. The plot and melody of an Armenian lullaby are taken as a starting point, where a mother tries to calm her son by offering to make a symbolic choice of a destiny bird. The boy does not choose peaceful birds, nightingale, or magpie. His predictable choice is a warlike hawk.

The horrors of war are resolutely put out of the brackets of this world without men. It is a gynaeceum, majestic, beautiful and frightening. Nineteen women of different ages wander in a string through the endless desert, re-mastering or forever saying goodbye to the space reminiscent of the fields of past battles. At times, the space collapses into a dark cave, a cramped stage area or a place for prayer. At these moments, the movement of women looks like a mysterious ritual. It seems necessary and meaningful.

Under the alarmingly changing sound of the lullaby, the stones hang in the air, the predatory hawk turns into a drone and the expectation of catharsis increases. The audience, indeed, is brought close to him, and twice. At first, space explodes with a cataclysm, suggesting the fateful presence of higher forces, and later, the glow of sunset is too similar to a fatal explosion of human origin. And it becomes clear that in this story, there is not only a happy end, but there is no end – it is looped, as it should be at video screenings. Here, this usual technique takes on a new meaning and significance. The story begins from the beginning, and the viewer returns to the pile of female bodies that wake up from sleep or get up after death. Folklore motifs of a lullaby are filled with actual meanings, meditativeness – hidden despair.

Soundtrack

Engaging with sound art taps into the neural pathways of our sonic imagination, distinct from the visual. Listening to this soundtrack invokes emotions and spatial memories, creating a deeply personal and evolving experience each time it is revisited.

To fully appreciate this immersive auditory journey, we recommend listening in a serene environment. Find a comfortable spot at home, put on your headphones, silence notifications, and dim the lights to eliminate distractions. The soundtrack is presented as a continuous unique piece, standing alone as a profound work of sound art.

Thank you for visiting

All the works from this exhibition you can look and buy at the marketplace