DEPONIE

 

15.12–28.01.23

Opening hours, Wed-Sat, 12pm - 7pm


 

OPENING on Dec 15, 6pm

For his project Deponie, Tobias Kruse sought out the traces and scars of a time that still casts a lingering shadow on the present: the years subsequent to the reunification of East Germany. A wild and paradoxical time, rich in opportunities, but one which also brought disappointment, anger and bitterness. Thirty years on from the fall of the Wall, the photographer and native of Mecklenburg, drove 8,000 kilometers through Eastern Germany, capturing what is left in the wake of this monumental juncture in history. A psycho-geographic exploration, Kruse documented everything from desolate countryside and rural villages to packed football stadiums and nighttime demonstrations – phenomena that are as much historical as they are contemporary in their integral space in Germany’s collective memory.

Kruse began his journey in Ihlenberg landfill (Deponie), near Schwerin, where he grew up, experiencing the early nineties as a teenager. A decade previously, in the eighties, hazardous waste from Western Europe was routinely disposed of in this landfill - known as VEB Deponie Schönberg - a publicly owned enterprise. The East was the recipient of foreign currency that allowed the West to dump its waste cheaply elsewhere. Even then, the damage to local people and the environment was devastating - the construction of the landfill was based on a decision by the Politburo (government) and was also illegal under GDR law. There were no serious environmental regulations or controls at the time, and as a result Schönberg quickly became the largest toxic waste dump in Europe.

After the fall of the Wall, the conventional procedure of West Germany’s script of reunification followed: takeover of the former public property for cosmetic rehabilitation by the state and finally a highly expensive sale. Local people were reduced to background actors in their new lives, and the landfill was greened; the 17 million tons of toxic waste, however, still lies beneath this seemingly flourishing landscape. And in the same way, although the specific location has disappeared over time, what has remained, along with the name Deponie, is the ominous mood.

The scar embedded in the shaved head is not the only relict to come from a period which followed two German dictatorships in the East, but also the suspicion of state organizations and decisions, as well as a residual anger that continues to throb in the temples of East Germans today. The insecurity and loss of control are echoed sadly in our current time, boldly reimagined in the echo chambers of the New Right. Tobias Kruse has filtered out his discomfort with this during his travels and amplified it in his black-and-white photographs. They act as a hinge between the past and present, expressive of how deep the wounds still run – a yearning for healing that still feels a long way off. In the end, his dark images leave a sombre and poignant uneasiness, one for the viewer to reflect on and sit with far beyond the gallery space. (Laura Benz)


TALK & BOOK SIGNING

On Sat, Dec 15, the artist will speak with photographer, lecturer and curator Thomas Gust before signing his catalogue published by spectorbooks.

Dec 17, 5 pm


all photos by Tobias Kruse