Dana Kavelina
Letter to a Turtledove (2020)

Video

Dates
1.7.–1.8.2022

Details
HD video, 21 min.

Location
Neue Galerie Graz
Graz

Series
A War in the Distance. Prologue

Russia’s war with Ukraine did not begin on 24 February 2022, but at least eight years earlier, when the coal-rich Donbas region became a battlefield for the Ukrainian army and Russian-sponsored separatists. Dana Kavelina’s film-poem tells of this war and the hallucinatory horrors it has unleashed. It combines archival footage, collage animation, and live-action segments with images of the 2014 war in Donbas taken from the anonymous five-hour documentary To Watch the War(2018). Today’s war appears as a reversal of Soviet history in the region, once a showcase of shock work and socialist industrialization. This implosion of history has left a jumble of jarring images and deadly rituals where documents and dreamscapes merge. Kavelina combines these to the unique rhythm of her poetic message—a radio broadcast addressed to women in the occupied territories. It is a threatening message promising destruction and redemption in nearly religious tones—a promise of the rapist to his victim. Part of a larger cycle of films on genocide, war, and their implications for women, Kavelina’s film offers very different optics from the objectifying ones we so often use to look at victimhood. It explores how violence is absorbed and encapsulated by its guilty survivors. Its treatment of such a sensitive topic prefigures today’s tragedy—the massive use of rape as a weapon of war by Russian soldiers.

Director and editor: Dana Kavelina
Actress and assistant: Kateryna Turenko
Text edited by Nikita Pidgora
Second voice: Nikita Pidgora

Retrospective
Retrospective
Retrospective