Anna: "Kafedra" gallery was running out of financial resources to rent our own space, but we were determined to do art projects. Our fellow artists, who also emigrated to Montenegro, had already made anti-war exhibitions in abandoned buildings and we saw that the public still showed up, despite the marginality of the spaces.
For our show, we found "Monte Carlo" Hotel to be the most convenient because its central location, the entrance that could be cleared of debris, a relative safety and the absence of stinking smell. Also the hotel itself is kind of a part of the mountain, standing on a quite isolated cliff, which was important for us because we held the “vernissage” partly in secret.
The thing is that the local police have a negative attitude towards anti-war actions - they could have simply forced us to dismantle everything. For example, last year my fellow citizens tried to hold “Faces of Russian Political Resistance” project in Budva. At first, all art spaces refused to collaborate with them and later, when they tried to place their posters around the city, the police dispersed everyone.
Arina: "Monte Carlo" is a heavily littered space, into which new life has literally begun to break through - fig trees have sprouted in the lobby, ferns have taken over the wall. But the amount of garbage deliberately brought and left by people was shocking. We decided to set the exhibition up in a fairly spacious hall, divided by partitions into several “pockets”, in one of which the fern was actually growing - our headliner who was showting to become a part of the performance.
I can hardly imagine what this part of the hotel used to be - a kitchen, a room or a service area. And this environment very much resonated with what we see in news reports about Ukrainian cities that get practically wiped off the face of the earth, when what is left of human civilization is broken glass, shabby concrete, fragments of pipes and communication lines. Seeing this was somewhat unsettling. The hall leading to the exhibition passed through such a narrow partition that one almost needed to squeeze between the walls and get physically involved into the space. Any anti-war art, in our opinion, should in no way be
"cozy" and comfortable to consume.
Anna:
Exactly! Broken glass, crumbled concrete, ferns and moss added even more force to the anti-war art statements. There was no need to think about pedestals and where to screw the works - we had protruding rusty nails, a hole in the elevator shaft, partitions with ceramic tiles, climbing greenery, old frames: in a sense, a dream gallery! No need to pay for the space or worry about damaged walls.
We planned the vernissage during daylight hours, because we didn’t have lights. Moreover, we had no desire run into teenagers who like hanging out there, drinking alcohol and cracking "bombs" out of boredom.