školská 28

komunikační
prostor

Toto je archivní stránka ukončeného projektu z roku 2016.
This is an archived web site for a project that ended in 2016.
 
Expedition

Altered Landscape, Life and Memory: A walk from Osek to the sites of the vanished vilages of Libkovice and Hrdlovka

Radka Schmelzová, Petr Meduna, Jiří Sádlo
Location: Libkovice, Mariánská Radčice
Frontiers of Solitude
Sun 20.9. - 0:00

Walking could turn out to be the best way to understand a place. Even the natural sciences and the humanities aim to explore the countryside, but they use different methods. For example, the foundations of a spatial archeology were laid right here, because of the extraordinary happenstance of removing the entire surface of the soil in such a broad scale, thereby discovering ancient settlements. You need not be a scientist to understand what is going on here: “How many times they have changed the course of the river Bílina?”

Together with an archaeologist, art historian and biologist we will visit several locations around the municipality Libkovice (Liquitz), which is today merely a small fragment of the exploited territory. Libkovice was the last coherent urban settlement destroyed by the expanding coal mine in 1992. The mining that was then planned has not yet been undertaken. There remains a devastated landscape, way of life and historical memory. To recap after twenty years: How is this different from the fate of Lidice? The landscape of the lignite basin of northwestern Bohemia still belongs among the most devastated landscapes in Europe. Does it matter who is in power?

Landscape of Eternal Unrest

The program: Today Libkovice is part of Mariánské Radčice. The cadaster of Libkovice has been systematically studied by archaeologists, beginning in the 1970s. Along with records of earlier findings, the archaeological record provides a detailed picture of the development of human settlements since the Neolithic Age, through its entire history. Libkovice itself was founded in the early Middle Ages (the oldest documents are from the 9th-10th centuries.) Since 1240, it has belonged to the Osek Monastery.

Our walk in this “sad country” (as it was once called by the famous photographer Josef Sudek), starts in the architecturally unique Osek Monastery complex, founded by a local noble family named Hrabišic at the end of the 12th century. The Cistercians moved here from the (now defunct) monastery Mašťov in Doupovské mountains. The development of the monastery in the 14th century drew income from the vast estates and from the silver and tin mines of the Ore Mountains .

The monastery was rebuilt in the spectacular way of the high Baroque (1712-1718) by an architect of Italian origin named Octavio Broggio (1670-1742), who was active in the Litomeřice region. The monastery barely escaped the secularization of Joseph II, and in the 19th century, with the process of industrialization and coal mining, it became, temporarily, the site of mayor’s office for the town of Osek.

We will visit the monument to the victims of the Nelson mine disaster, which will recall a post-industrial “ghost story”. We will climb the quartzite rock outcropping called teh Salesius heights, named after the Osek abbot Salesius Krügner, who was a lover of nature in the Ore Mountains.

Biologist Jiří Sádlo will ask questions about how the local landscape is being restored: Can we call it still nature or not? How does it fit in with the ancient landscape of the Ore mountains? We will pass through the village of Lom, today a small town with mining colonies and a unique atmosphere.

Panoramic vistas over the lignite mines can be interpreted as a parable about anthropocentrism, egocentrism, and the dark sides of humanity.

Meeting point: Information Centre Osek monastery at 10:00 AM.

Duration: all-day walk (max. 15 km).

Equipment: wear sturdy shoes, bring snacks (snacks are available at the final stop in Marian Radčice).

Contact: Dagmar Šubrtová - dasas@email.cz.

Workshop is organized by Školská 28 Gallery (DEAI/Setkání) as part of a bigger, transnational project called Frontiers of Solitude (www.frontiers-of-solitude.org/ ), supported from the EEA Grants (Iceland, Lichtenstein and Norway) through the programme CZ06 Cultural Heritage and Contemporary Art. Partners of the project are Atelier Nord in Oslo, Norway, and the Center for Visual Art Skaftfell, Iceland.