Sunday 22 June 2014

Chernobyl - A Pompeii for the 20th century



"Avoid the moss. Whatever you do, don't touch the moss." Such were the cautionary words imparted by my tour guide Nick regarding these verdant radioactive sponges as we progressed past the checkpoint marking the entrance to the 30-kilometre exclusion zone of Chernobyl, the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster.

For the second day of my short trip to the Ukraine, I had decided to sign onto an organised tour, reasoning, perhaps perversely, that in light of the civil war scorching its very visible destruction upon the country, it might in fact be one of the safest places for a hapless foreigner to find himself.

It was on the night of April 26th 1986, during a scheduled safety test, that Reacter No.4 erupted like a radioactive volcano, expelling the equivalent of 100 times the combined radiation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The westerly winds propelled the fallout into Sweden, Italy, Germany, the South of France and even Great Britain.

Nearly three decades on and the area immediately surrounding the reactor is still radioactive, although for a drop-in visit of 4 to 5 hours the potential implications of the fallout is equivalent to the exposure during a flight from London to New York. In fact, Nick says, as we drive on closer to the epicentre, his Geiger counter remaining subdued on the dashboard, there is less radiation in this outer ring of Zone than in Kiev where nearly all the buildings are made from granite.

Indeed, despite the region having been rendered inhospitable for approximately 200,000 years, human activity in the 'Zone of Alienation' has steadily increased. There is a hub of scientists based near the reacter, a construction team working on the long-awaited protective dome, not to mention small cliques of local residents evacuated in the mass exodus of the 186 satellite villages, seeking reassimilation to their homes and former way of life.

There's something affecting, almost noble, about seeing small clutches of these people, living something of a nomadic existance, foraging for wild mushrooms and berries amongst the forest; victims of circumstances far beyond their control, stoically defying both the health risks and the necessary detachment from modern civilisation to reclaim their homeland.

Driving past these diminutive cottages surrendered to the woods that have grown to swallow them, I began to feel like I had embarked upon a kind of morbid safari, observing this evidence of the profound human impact the catastrophe had wrought on local inhabitants of the region.


Progressing on to the 'Chernobyl City' we pause by an iron monument to the 28 firemen who died as a result of their immediate response. The strataspherically high dose of radiation their bodies absorbed as they entered the burning reactor caused them to die gradually and painfully in a Kiev hospital over the following fortnight, the injuries they sustained far exceeding the realms of medical cure. These, plus two engineers who died in the explosion, comprise the 30 victims officially recognised by the Soviet government as being casualties of the disaster.

There has been no authorised investigation into the number of secondary casualties who suffered from virulent cancers, radiation poisoning, and blood diseases as a result of their exposure; nor the abortions, miscarriages and seriously deformed children born shortly after, or those yet to suffer from latent disorders; all of whom are estimated to comprise hundreds of thousands across Europe.

Approaching the nuclear plant complex itself the geiger counter starts to accelerate like a terrifying taxi meter forcing you to momentarily query your own sanity for being there. We pass by a tree stump of a cooling tower paused for all time mid-construction, a project doomed never to reach operability.



And then we are there, only a couple of hundred metres away from Reacter No.4 itself, encased in steel and concrete in what appears to be an improvised and haphazard arrangement with scant recourse to coherent design, which of course is probably not far from being the case.

In the weeks and months following the explosion, around half a million miners and construction workers were conscripted from across Russia to combat the burgeoning emergency situation which threatened to toxify the entire continent of Europe. Their mission was to contain the continual leakage of radioactive waste into the atmosphere; in effect to create a sarcophagus around the superstructure. The design life was limited to around thirty years, at which point the tourniquet would begin to unravel and require substantial reenforcement.


Several years later than planned, construction began on the steel dome that now sits neighbouring the reactor, nearing completion and waiting to be edged across to form another stabilising layer; like a kind of structural Russian doll that will over many years be encased in ever more insulating layers.


From there it is on to the abandoned town of Pripyat, where more than anywhere else the true symbolic and imaginative potency of the disaster is laid bare.

On the approach road a proud sign establishes the city's formation as being 1970, lending a degree of retrospective poignancy to the fact that the city (with a population of over 49,000 at the time of the disaster), was to fall at the premature age of only 26. Poignant too in that Pripyat, being a kind of Ebenezer Howard 'garden city' for the nuclear age, had provoked a great deal of opportunity and optimism for this confident investment in nuclear as a source of energy. Workers were offered handsome salaries and young families were encouraged to move there; the immigrants to a new unpopulated town, with naturally expanded hopes for what the future held for them.


Stepping out across the main town square, there is a silence that lies thick like dust over everything, that repudiates the intrinsic nature of urbanity. The square is flanked by large concrete high rises - a hotel, a leisure complex, an apartment block - that conform to the architectural blueprints of the Soviet ideal; the rigid constructivism in tandem with Stalinist neoclassicism.

In fact, given the town's untimely descent into ruins, it can be seen as ironic that the traditional ethos of the Soviet architecture that 'form follow function' (unlike so much of contemporary neoliberal capitalist architecture), has been inverted. Since there was no function for these buildings to fulfil post-1986, all that remains is the aesthetic.

It was at this point, as Nick pointed out a path across the square, that I felt the overwhelming congruence with Andrei Tarkovsky's classic 'Stalker', a film that many deemed to be a prophesy of Chernobyl, with the mysterious 'Forbidden Zone' that is traversed in search of some elusive philosophical truth. There is a metaphysical force that threatens those who travel to the Zone, similarly, it could be said that radiation is a natural metaphysical element, usurping visibility, manifesting itself into all and any tangible physical property including of course the sanctity of our own bodies.


We ambled around the iconic fairground; the ferris wheel and dodgem cars standing in slow decay, gradually being overcome by rust, almost like the sombre, neglected toys of children who suddenly morphed into adults and moved on to alternative means of distraction.


In the high school, we roam between classrooms that have all the appearance of being vacated in a chaotic frenzy; textbooks lie strewn in snowdrift piles, glass from every window is splintered across the floor like a bomb blast pattern. Particularly unnerving is the huge collection of plastic gas masks gathered on one of the upper floors as though they were a corpus of dead birds.


Surveying these relics of urbanity, I ruminate on how Pripyat exists as a city totally cleansed of its 'Debord-ian' spectacle in a way that is completely antithetical to the way in which people live and relate to cities; constantly immersed in and compelled by a myriad of commercial imperatives, stimulation and simulation, pushed and pulled in all manner of physical and emotional directions.


I'm aware of the frequent references made to J.G. Ballard in my writing. However, in this instance the connection is simply unavoidable, given that Chernobyl is the landscape that most closely mirrors the fictive 'Ballardian' plains - the abandoned hotel, the drained swimming pool, the resurging synergy between the natural and the built environments as wildlife continues to reclaim the terrain for itself. Not only this, but the fact that this was a highly modern community built from nothing, with its primary purpose being to support the technological 'machine' that in the end destroyed itself and cast the town into desuetude.

It was the equivalent of a city settlement expanding around the holy ground of a cathedral, with religious faith being the elixir that both sustained and legitimised the community. Nuclear power was the deity to which the inhabitants, and the USSR as a whole, bent their knee; a belief in the primacy of harnessing this force to sustain their existance and elevate their society on the continual march of progress. It was a belief that, at the hands of human folly (the power plant concealed numerous critical design flaws that rendered its demise an inevitability), would provoke an apocalyptic wrath upon the denizens.


There was one point on the tour that I found striking in the multi-faceted narratives it seemed to encapsulate. In a storage room of one of the high rises, a tableau of Soviet banners and flags, iconography of Lenin and other local political figures, were arranged against the walls; preparations for the May Day celebrations of just a handful of days hence. The fact that they remained here forgotten, in all their proud nationalist pomp and finery, relics of a celebration that never happened, I found immensely symbolic of just how integral the disaster was in contributing to the dismantling of the Soviet state that had come to dominate Mother Russia since the revolution.

With the USSR experiencing economic decline, and after the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan, there was a dawning radicalisation brewing amidst the populace which Gorbachev tried to harness with his programme of restructuring. This period of 'Glasnost' (openness) was a stark contrast to the cloak of secrecy with which the Soviet Union had attempted to envelope the events of Chernobyl.

In the days after the event, the government refused to acknowledge or report it, only doing so when scientists in Sweden were alerted to adnormally high radiation levels emanating from foreign regions. Not only this, but they sought to manipulate the numbers of those affected by radiation by raising the threshold level at which one could be deemed contaminated. With such engrained deception levering a disjunct between state-held ideology and civilian well being, it was surely inevitable that the tide would soon have to turn against the Communist Party.


In the end, my overriding impression of Chernobyl is that the desolate towns, the ruined structures, the dessicated ambition, are all fundamentally emblematic of a possible future for humankind.

Pripyat in particular, stands as an Athens or Rome for the 20th century; its lifespan from creation to destruction proceeding at a very modern hyperspeed. The landscape is evidence of a broken marriage between faith in science and technology, and fallible human endeavour. It represents, in the short term, a marked cultural shift for a nation that would be profoundly altered in 1991; and, in the long term, a vision of human civilisation after some cataclysmic 'doomsday' event, after which nature has the freedom to reassert its control.

It is not pessimism to state that all cities will eventually be ruins, or that all that is must some day cease to be, and with that in mind Chernobyl exists as a stark yet highly modern vision of the future urban landscape.

Wednesday 18 June 2014

Culture - May

Books read:

Nikolai Gogol - 'Dead Souls'
Sun-Tzu - 'The Art of War' (non-fiction)
Iain Banks - 'The Wasp Factory'
William Powell - 'The Anarchist Cookbook' (non-fiction)
Noam Chomsky - 'Interventions' (non-fiction)


Films Watched:

'Blue Ruin' (Jeremy Saulnier) (at Ritzy Picturehouse, Brixton)
'The Candidate' (Michael Ritchie)
'The Two Faces of January' (Hossein Amini) (at Ritzy Picturehouse, Brixton)
'La Jetee' (Chris Marker)
'Everything you always wanted to know about sex (but were afraid to ask)' (Woody Allen)
'Concussion' (Stacie Passon) (at Cornerhouse, Manchester)
'Before Sunset' (Richard Linklater)
'Before Sunrise' (Richard Linklater)

Albums Played:

The War on Drugs - 'Lost in the Dream'
Coldplay - 'Ghost Stories'
The Brian Jonestown Massacre - 'Revelation'
Leftfield - 'Rhythm and Stealth'
Little Dragon - 'Nabuma Rubberband'

Gigs:

Nine Inch Nails at O2 Arena, London
Nine Inch Nails at MEN Arena, Manchester

Events:

Irvine Welsh at Southbank Centre
'May 1968, Spring Revolution. A Tale of two cities' (Atlas Gallery)
'Under the influence: John Deakin and the lure of Soho' (Photographer's Gallery)
David Lachapelle - 'Land Scape' (Robilant + Voena, London)

Wednesday 11 June 2014

Tearing the city at the seams #20 - One day in Kiev



Hoisting the anchor of stable circumstance can lead to a tendency to drift in impulsive and uncharacteristic directions. And so it was, mired in early-year personal turbulence that I found myself one evening booking a flight (non-refundable as it turned out), to a place in the world that had most recently detached itself from the mainland of stability into uncertain waters - Kiev.

The Ukraine has barely left the headlines since late-2013 when vicious street protests flared up in response to President Yanukovych's overt flirtation with Putin's Russia and shunning of any closer alliance with the EU. The revolutionary skirmishes in Maiden Square were covered almost in real time by the media and so naturally, the usually restrained, impulsive side in me set the controls for the heart of the action.

I was all of a sudden imbued with a defiant conviction that any writer worth reading at all is one that has lived a tempestuous life; the power of the imagination lies almost secondary to having rolled the dice of fate and chance and dealt with whatever the outcome. Ballard, Burroughs, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, Bukowski, Celine - all writers with lives that served as the skeleton upon which their imagination conjured flesh and muscle. I was in thrall to writers like Orwell and Hemingway who bade farewell to their homelands and threw themselves into the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s, and by the war photographer Don McCullin, who decided to travel to Berlin as the wall was first being erected, splitting Germany into East and West, and in the process breaking down his own personal wall separating him from a successful media career.

Not, I hasten to add, that I was deluded enough to think I would be able to join in the protesters or try and 'make my name'; merely that for a short period the sensation that the natural progression of life insulates with a comfort blanket of prosaic routine became intensified to the point at which in some way I felt I had to respond.

As it happenned, the date for my departure ended up being repelled by the heat of erupting civil war from March until early-June, by which time both my own circumstances and that of Kiev have largely subsided to a state of calm dormancy.


There is something to be said for arriving at a place shortly after an upheaval has occurred, when the unsettled dust still floats perceptibly in the breeze like dandelion seeds uncertain of where to come to rest. Indeed, sitting on a grassy bank with a panorama of Maidan Independence Square, it's hard not to draw equivalence with the philosopher Jean Baudrillard, who posed the provocative thesis in 1991 that 'the Gulf War did not take place'.

He was raising the idea that the conflict had been experienced in a light refracted so prevalently through the media/propaganda prism for those in the West, contorted into shapes to fit specific agenda and directives. To such an extent that there was little connection to be felt with the conflict in any way other than through a nonchalant acknowledgement of the stylised spectacle that had been manufactured around the real events like an incubator.

Having been exposed to the action broadcast on the news - the elusive snipers dotted around rooftops, the entrenched protesters clashing with armed police - it feels profoundly strange to be peering through the spectacle at reality itself - it felt like the unrest had played out in the reified plain of the media landscape and no where else, and that this was little more than a stage set for a drama that had now broken for an interval.

Surely it couldn't have all taken place here?, I found myself thinking. Where singers and bands take turns on a stage, where young couples saunter in the sun eating ice cream, and where parents bring small children as though they were sight-seeing in central London, particularly apt with the Independence Monument standing like a gold-tasselled Nelson's Column.



But of course, one soon notices the barricades and rubble mounds that block the streets leading onto the square; the ramparts of sandbags and tyres built up like an urbanised Western Front; the solemn wreathes and urn-like candles that line the kerbs as markers of those who died here only a handful of weeks ago.

There are the yellow-and-blue flags, the graffiti proclamations, and large sections of the road brickwork that has been broken up and stacked to one side as an improvised arsenal ready to be utilised as missiles should circumstances dictate. Broken bricks lie strewn across the ground like the spent cartridges of a battle over which the locals stroll apparently trying to affect a front of calm ambivalence.

And why shouldn't they? Politics and civil disorder have their place but before long people just want to reinstall some degree of order. Petro Poroshenko, Ukraine's Willy Wonka, has been elected in the May elections promising to extinguish the still-raging fires of resistance in the East of the country, particularly in the Donetsk region where, having held their own (largely symbolic) elections a few weeks ago, there are many pushing for the establishment of a People's Republic, carving themselves away from Kiev's authority.

Later on in the day, I chance upon St. Sophia's Square as motorcades carrying politicians and senior figures race past applauding crowds lining the roads en route to the President's official swearing-in.

It is astonishing just how circular the historic narrative is within the space of nearly one century, in parallel to how Mikhail Bulgakov in 'The White Guard' documented the agitation and the frenzy of 1918 as the occupying Germans fled the city, leaving nationalist forces and Russian socialists to roil for supremacy in a whirlpool of discontent.

His novel deals with the patriotic cynosure that so often leads to blindness, and the struggle to assert basic humanitarian principles in a time of factionalism and perfidy. It is more than a little obvious to the detached outsider that, climbing down a few rungs on the generational ladder, the very same passions and tensions are brewing to full strength once again.


The usually free-flowing access around Maidan Square is still snarled up with a jam of khaki tents, a kind of refugee settlement in which protesters sit in defiant solidarity for a cause that persists despite, or perhaps because of, its ambiguity. I can't claim to have conducted a straw poll of local opinion during my time there, but both the female manager of the hostel I was staying at and a male tour guide I met the following day, seemed bemused by their determination in remaining encamped. The latter cynically remarked that, "I think they've gotten quite comfortable there, they get donations from the tourists, I don't think they want to go home".

I suppose they might feel that by their very visible presence, they might continue to hold Poroshenko to account during his tentative first steps in office, acting as a peoples' court against which his progress will be judged. Symbolically at least, they represent the scabs hardening over the still-raw wounds of the unrest, which only a successful transition of power and time will heal into obsolescence.

The greatest challenge facing the foreign traveller to Kiev is the obstacle of language. The vast majority of signage and text is in Cyrillic, a rigid and angular alphabetic cliff face on which it's nigh-on impossible for the ignorant to gain a foothold. I had learnt approximations of the staple Ukrainian phrases but progressing to saying "do you speak English?" (which my guidebook translated as "vy rozmovlyayete anhliys'koyu?") proved a step too far and my garbled articulations - mainly in restaurants and ticket kiosks - resulted in quizzical and uncomprehending stares. That said, the desired effect of my atrocious pronunciation was that they instantly grasped that I certainly did not speak Ukrainian, and pityingly obliged as I was reduced to gesticulating awkwardly.


Getting up early on a Saturday morning (Bulgakov described the awakening city as 'looking like a pearl set in turquoise'), I decided, before heading to Maidan Square, I would take the metro over to visit the Kievo-Pecherska Lavra, the major monastery of the Eastern (Orthodox) Church and the 'spiritual heart' of Ukraine to which thousands of pilgrims migrate every year.

Founded by St. Anthony in the mid-11th century, the site has suffered extraordinary devastation at the hands of the invading Mongol and Tartar armies, and most recently the centrepiece Dormition Cathedral was bombed by the Russians as the German army entered Kiev in 1941 (although Russian historians have long tried to extricate blame, instead pinning it on the Nazis).

Now rebuilt, the Dormition is magnificently ostentatious with its 7 golden onion-domes gleaming in the intensifying morning heat, from which drifted the undulating bass tones of a male choir. Overlooking the Lavra is the Golden Bell Tower, resembling a telescope unfolded and stood on end.


The epicentre of all this holiness though are the Caves, tucked away inside a more modest church, containing the mummified bodies of St. Anthony and 120 other monks. The caves are confined and claustrophobic, lit only by a few wax candles, with the caskets set into small alcoves and niches in the walls.

Observing the shrines and the camp at Maidan Square, I did not overtly feel like a voyeur, but here in the caves I certainly felt that I was trespassing in a way on this holy terrain, as pilgrims passed me by spasmodically crossing themselves and bending to kiss the caskets. Some appeared to be racing through the alcoves in the same manner as they would through the aisles of a supermarket doing their Saturday morning shopping, whilst for others it did appear to be a profound enactment of their devout reverence.


Feeling like something of an infidel, I fled the Lavra and made my way back to central Kiev. I headed south down the main promenade of Vul Khreschatyk, a street that has welcomed the post-independence influx of Western franchises like Zara and Marks & Spencer, to where it abuts with Tarasa Shevchenko Bul. It was at this junction that the statue of Lenin had stood until being torn down at some point over the last few weeks, leaving a stumpy pedestal waiting for another stone idol to be installed.

Turning to head north again up Vul Volodymyrska, I pass the resplendent National Opera and Ballet Theatre as well as the hunchback Zoloti Vorota, a replica of the main entrance to Kiev. Before making the descent towards the quarter of Podil, the exuberant St. Andrew's Church dominates the crest of the hill, with its white, purple and gold Baroque ornamentation and spires shaped like perfume bottles.


Sweeping down the cobbled Andriivsky uzviz, on which sits Mikhail Bulgakov's house, it's impossible not to become distracted by the many souvenir stalls that line the pavement. There are an abundance of quintessential handicrafts - pysanky (decorated Easter eggs) and rushnyky (embroidered hand towels) - as well as Russian dolls and a panoply of Soviet-era memorabilia.

I cannot help but purchase a grey fur Soviet hat emblazoned with the hammer and sickle badge, despite being certain that such items will now be produced and imported en masse from China, but as the stallowner tries to emphasise the hat's authenticity I don't feel inclined to shatter the illusion.


Feeling footsore and weary by this mid-afternoon point I use the Funicular to winch me back up Vladimir's Hill and make my way back towards Maidan Square to a bohemian basement cafĂ© to sample some authentic Ukrainian cuisine - borsch (a flavoursome beetroot soup), varenyky (dumplings stuffed with cheese, potato and mushrooms), and the obligatory horilka (vodka) served with lots of ice and lemon. The bill comes to 130 hryvnias or roughly £6.50!

But the agreeable exchange rate is just one reason why more people should ignore caution and make the trip to Kiev. It is an attractive and tidy city, abundant with greenery and flowers, and a wealth of history to explore. Indeed, the architecture itself denotes a sense of identity crisis and conflicting allegiances that have and will certainly continue to leave their impression on the city. On the one hand the expansive boulevards, cobbled streets and elaborate cathedrals are reminiscent of the Europe with which many citizens would like stronger bonds to be forged; whilst there are many striking and imposing slabs of Soviet architecture (particularly on the bus ride from the airport),that illustrate the overarching dominance exerted by Russia for so long, and that threaten to hobble Ukraine's moves towards autonomy.

There still remains unrest in the East that has yet to subside, Poroshenko needs to work hard to convince the electorate that the endemic corruption of his predecessors can be eradicated. He also somehow needs to balance the diplomatic scales between Putin's Russia and their dramatic inflation of previously generous energy prices on the one side (the tour guide I speak to tells me he has grave concerns and recently disposed of his TV); and avoid becoming unnecessarily beholden to America in the same way as the Baltic states such as Estonia, Latvia and Belarus have become effectively NATO outposts used to push American imperialism antagonistically up against Russian borders.

It is a delicate tightrope to walk and only time will tell whether it can be realised effectively without further disruption being brought upon the lives of the Ukrainian people.


Sitting on a bank surveying Maidan Square I can't help but think of the present as a definite lull, a period of calm before an inevitable resurgence of the storm. Coincidentally, overhead a timpani of thunder rolls across the sky after the day's engorged sun, yet no rain is forthcoming. The couples and the families saunter by, eating ice cream and drinking beer, whilst musicians play on the stage.

My eye becomes caught by two soldiers in camouflage attire walking past, each with a firm grip on the arms of a man who remonstrates between them. The manner in which they have hold of him is clearly in an effort at being as inconspicuous as possible, heading towards one of the hotel complexes that flank the square, and certainly it would appear that everyone around is oblivious except myself.

Who is this man I wonder? What offence has he committed and what fate awaits him? After a few seconds they are lost from sight amidst the bustle of the crowd and already I'm querying the implications of what I've seen, perhaps merely importing my own desire for a more tangible sense of drama to inflect upon the narrative.

For what had I sought to gain from this foray to a fractious land?; merely to survey the wreckage of recent events, carefully arranged like forensic evidence at a crime scene?; to intricately extract some inspirational serum from this volatile plant?; or perhaps to glimpse just for a moment through the shroud of ambivalent normalcy and discern something momentary of the very real disharmony still present?

In any case, all selfish personal reasons for being there - for adventure, experience, to break from the sanctuary of routine - remain ineluctably so. I realise that, although I may have travelled here as an intrepid, slightly daring, slightly risk-seeking tourist, nonetheless I am, and have little more insight on the real complexities of the situation as they stand than, a tourist.

Monday 2 June 2014

REVIEW - David Lachapelle - 'Land Scape'



There’s something psychologically compelling about our perception of scale being manipulated, something innately alluring about seeing things reduced to their miniature representation. The sense perhaps of redefining the frustratingly rigid scale of our own physicality and the assertion of some semblance of superiority.

I remember my fascination and fondness for London stemming from a family holiday when I was 8 or 9. It was my first exposure to such a city, and the sheer enormity of it all left an indelible impression on me, like a geographic tinnitus that is still ringing on within me today.

Although more recently, as I’ve begun to think about these things, I do wonder whether it was the homeward-bound visit to Legoland, with its many colourful representations of London, that assisted in some way to distort or enliven my haptic sense of the amorphous city as a place of intrigue and imagination.


It is an inherent attraction that Swift captures so brilliantly in ‘Gulliver’s Travels’, and manifests itself in the preoccupations of model-making, toy train enthusiasts and other stereotypically ‘bloke-in-a-shed’ pursuits.

So, attending David Lachapelle’s ‘Land Scape’ exhibition at the Robilant + Veona gallery, I was impressed at how his work manages so successfully to dispossess you of your sense of scale, at least temporarily.

The exhibition presents his model representations of industrial power stations and oil refineries, placing them in naturalistic landscapes – deserts, city backdrops, and such like – and taking photographs that are then exploded into enormous prints. The effect is disorientating – the size of the prints appears to demand some distance of the observer, and yet it is only on drawing nearer that one realises that these steam-belching behemoths of industry are actually composites of everyday items arranged and built like some highly elaborate ‘Blue Peter’ model.


Intricate pipe runs are plastic straws, ventilation plant are old egg boxes, cooling chimneys are beers cans; the minutiae of the detail is persistently revealing, the ingenuity behind the constructions considerable. The success of the models lies in the implementation of such perfunctory items; the paraphernalia of the everyday – mobile phones, biro pens, matchsticks, cardboard – that we have come to regard on an almost subliminal level; their new application forces the observer to recognise them under a new guise.

It is a clever construct in repackaging a panoply of familiar products, camouflaged by their very ubiquity, to try and convince us of something altogether different – perhaps an allegory for the consumerist ‘confidence trick’ as a whole?

Indeed, the more I thought about it, the more I saw Lachapelle’s pieces as being – whether by design or otherwise – representative of the holistic process of production and consumption; the recycling of the end products of industry to assume the form of the mechanical apparatus, energy and power that generated them into existence in the first place.