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Natalia Romik in conversation with François Guesnet

27 June 2023–27 July 2023, 6:00 pm–7:00 pm

Natalia Romik Ben Hunter

UCL alumna and UCL Professor of Modern Jewish History discussing her solo exhibition at Ben Hunter, 'Hand and Trapdoor'

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Ben Hunter Gallery

Location

Ben Hunter
44 Duke Street
St James's London
SW1Y 6DD

Join Natalia Romik and François Guesnet, Professor of Modern Jewish History, Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at University College London for an in-conversation on the occasion of Romik's first solo exhibition at the gallery.

Address: Ben Hunter, 44 Duke Street St James's, London, SW1Y 6DD
Tuesday 27 June (6-7PM)

Places are limited. RSVP essential.
Please contact lizzy@benhunter.gallery to confirm attendance. 

Natalia Romik

Natalia Romik was born in 1983 in Warsaw, Poland. She is an artist, historian and architect. She completed her PhD at Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London in 2018 and has been awarded numerous grants and scholarships including the Dan David Prize 2022, the London Arts and Humanities Partnership and the Scholarship of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage of Poland for her project Jewish Architecture of (Non-)Memory in Silesia. Her postdoctoral research project, Hideouts - an artistic tribute to survival architecture, the hiding places built and used by Jews during the Holocaust - was presented at Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw and TRAFO, Szczecin in Poland in 2022. In 2024, the exhibition will travel to The Jewish Museum in Frankfurt, Germany.

About the exhibition

Natalia Romik’s first solo exhibition at Ben Hunter foregrounds her committed interest in investigating and preserving Jewish memory, in particular its material and architectural traces. The exhibition comprises two sculptures: Trapdoor (Zhovkva), an artistic tribute to survival architecture, a hiding place built and used by Jews during the Holocaust., and Jad, a nomadic sculpture created as a vehicle for urban protest.

Trapdoor (Zhovkva), is an artistic tribute to survival architecture, a hiding place built and used by Jews during the Holocaust. It is a cast sculpture of the entry point to a hideout lifted from panels in a parquet floor in Zhovkva, present day Ukraine. The sculptural form is presented alongside results of extensive interdisciplinary research carried out by Romik alongside a team of anthropologists, historians, archaeologists and urban explorers with the aim to uncover, map and archive examples of Jewish survival architecture. The project pays tribute to the daily toil of those in hiding and those who provided hiding places, their creativity, solidarity, and will to live, often overlooked in the tradition of heroic commemorations. It reflects on fundamental problems of architecture and social coexistence, such as the relationship between form and function or the design and use of space.

The second monumental sculpture, Jad, is a nomadic machine clad in mirrors, shaped as a hand with a pointing finger. It is a tool for architectural protest and urban memory. The form of this sculpture is inspired by the Jewish liturgical instrument Yad, a hand-shaped pointer used to read Torah. In 2012, Romik transported the sculpture to places of architectural decay in Silesian Metropolis, condemning contemporary urban management which sees derelict and historically Jewish architecture destroyed or forgotten. Jad was deployed to call attention to erased architectural memory.

The exhibition foregrounds on the idea of visibility; Jad is clad in reflective material which aims to mirror and therefore magnify the urban erosion it is calling attention to, whilst also creating an illusion of disappearing. Trapdoor (Zhovkva) plays with visibility as an essential property of its architectural form; it must remain invisible to the unauthorised eye. Romik takes the tragic history of the Holocaust as a starting point for a universal reflection on methods of survival in situations of existential threat. Her sculptures elegantly open a dialogue about commemoration, memory, migration, loss and architectural creativity. They ruminate more broadly on the cognitive potential of architecture and art, reflecting upon the way in which community is established in situations of threat.