Ziamliačka – Belarusian for "a woman who comes from the same soil" – is Cemra's latest project, performance, installation and labour of love all at once. It began with the illegal transport of 225 kg of Belarusian soil to Poland, where its scent was extracted in order to preserve the memory of an unreachable homeland in the form of an olfactory archive.
Smells are powerful memory triggers because they are directly connected to the limbic system. This enables them to instantly conjure up seemingly forgotten memories. The process of extracting the scent took Cemra several months and involved several stages. Layers of soil on Vaseline were changed three times every ten days, then covered with alcohol for another ten days and left to evaporate for 24 hours. Fat and ethanol preserved the scent of what had been taken from the artist. Thus, the extract in the installation remains visible in a hand-blown flacon but not directly smellable.
The soil that Cemra presents in her installation in the Needle of Kunsthaus Graz, piled in a minimalist glass cube, is more than just matter; it is a political body that crosses borders, preserves a sense of home and refuses erasure by turning private loss into a shared archive for all exiles. At the same time, it represents the energy that Cemra lost during her years in exile, energy that must be replenished. "True power flows not only from those who stand beside you, but from the ground beneath your feet."
At the opening of her exhibition at Kunsthaus Graz, Cemra closes the circle that began with an act of activism with a poetic, melancholic reinterpretation of a Belarussion lullaby.
Kulturvermittlung Steiermark