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	<title>Maria Vollas</title>
	<link>https://mariavollas.com</link>
	<description>Maria Vollas</description>
	<pubDate>Tue, 30 May 2023 13:26:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Home</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Home</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:48 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

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		<title>National Garden for Subterranean Heritage</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/National-Garden-for-Subterranean-Heritage-1</link>

		<pubDate>Tue, 30 May 2023 13:26:53 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/National-Garden-for-Subterranean-Heritage-1</guid>

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	NATIONAL GARDEN FOR SUBTERRANEAN HERITAGE
A REPOSITORY FOR HUMAN/EARTHLY MATTER
	Fall 2021 - Spring 2022Master of Landscape Architecture Thesis Harvard University Graduate School of DesignAdvised by Rosalea Monacella







	The National Garden for Subterranean Heritage reconceptualizes the botanical National Garden of Athens, Greece, as a networked repository for human/earthly stories. Critiquing colonial practices of transplantations and classifications of imposed fragmentations embedded in the National Garden, the repository investigates situated knowledges of ground matter exposed within the subterranean metro network. National is redefined as the temporal entanglements of human inhabitations and geologic transformations, unearthed in proposed Gardens of Human/Earthly Matter within the Syntagma, Acropolis, Monastiraki, and Evangelismos stations and curated at the Repository of Subterranean Heritagewithin the existing botanical garden. Reacting to the absence of earthly agencies in Athens’s historical narratives, the repository restores Theophrastus’s didactic empirical gardens exhibiting conglomerated strata as coauthored systems of air, water, earth, fire, and live matter. Ancient fragments, infrastructures, and material flows are resurfaced in the decentralized gardens, exposing the agencies of power, culture, economy, and life in the formation of the city.
	&#60;img width="2920" height="2907" width_o="2920" height_o="2907" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/8d0ac87ffb55564c59260f372f0702dce7b597d122eed1727830272cd168df33/220518-title-page.jpg" data-mid="180408210" border="0" data-scale="88" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/8d0ac87ffb55564c59260f372f0702dce7b597d122eed1727830272cd168df33/220518-title-page.jpg" /&#62;








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Curatorial plan of the proposed Repository of Subterranean Heritage, transforming&#38;nbsp; the existing National Garden in Athens, Greece.





&#60;img width="3200" height="3200" width_o="3200" height_o="3200" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/0a13ae01de071b9a9c17cbcd65ada9297a16c575d572fc8913b6628c5ba148be/220603-territory-map-100dpi.jpg" data-mid="180408185" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/0a13ae01de071b9a9c17cbcd65ada9297a16c575d572fc8913b6628c5ba148be/220603-territory-map-100dpi.jpg" /&#62;
Territorial map of the decentralized National Garden for Subterranean Heritage, including the four gardens of Power, Economy, Culture, and Life and the Repository of Subterranean Heritage.



&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f4bf5c5f2f2f7e5ab474df1b8b094305c6b65f6561b058b68fccc74d79bdfc3f/221203-attica-1-150dpi.jpg" data-mid="180426489" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f4bf5c5f2f2f7e5ab474df1b8b094305c6b65f6561b058b68fccc74d79bdfc3f/221203-attica-1-150dpi.jpg" /&#62;
Map of Attica illustrating the ancient extraction of matter from geologic layers and the material flows that constructed the ancient city of Athens.



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Detailed map of the Attica region, illustrating the geologic conditions from which material was sourced in ancient times for the construction of the ancient city-now subterranean geocultural conditions within the historic center of Athens.




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Timelines of evolution of ground matter for the sites of the Gardens and the Repository, correlating the generalized “human history” lineage of Athens to the evolution of materiality for each site. The drawing begins from the pure bedrock condition (bottom) with the first human inhabitation of the landscape to the contemporary layer of the city (top) in 2022.







	GARDENS OF POWERDeparting from Syntagma (Σύνταγμα) Station, the artefacts of human/earthly infrastructures are examined here in their relationship to power dynamics and from the elemental methodology of matter indexes. Archaeologic excavations as part of the construction of the metro station at the Amalias Ave. have exposed a series of now-buried and subterranean infrastructural networks that combine elements of fire, air, water, and earth in relationship to regimes of Peisistratos’ Tyranny, Classical Age Democracy, and Roman Empire’s Monarchy.&#38;nbsp; The terracotta and lead-constructed water pipeline of Peisistratos’ aqueduct carved deep into the Athenian bedrock and transporting freshwater from the outskirts to the center of the ancient city was exposed during the subway construction works. 
	


Bronze extracted from the Lavrion mines was also transported here and processed through the use of fire in the bronze foundries of the Classical Age Athens. Eridanos river, which used to cross the site was early on manipulated by human settlers, with expansive and complex systems of reservoirs, aqueducts, and pipelines capturing the water flow to feed the wood-burning heated Roman baths. The messy conglomerations of all of these infrastructural elements is exposed in this garden as a monument, with the roman baths becoming pools of water and the river Eridanos continuing to flow underneath the human/earthy monument.



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GARDENS OF ECONOMY
A little bit further down, Eridanos river remains captured in the Monastiraki (Μοναστηράκι) Station, captured and delimited in two canals constructed back in 487 BC. In my last visit to the site during the winter, water continued to flow within this stone conglomerate ancient infrastructure, demonstrating the vibrant presence and performance of these human/earthly subterranean infrastructures operating quietly under the contemporary city of Athens. Recentering here to the topic of the Monastiraki station as a commercial center, the intervention here is focused on exposing the convergence of flows, which are either material/commercial/capitalistic flows, the water flow of the buried river and the flows of people. The existence of the many pottery, copper and marble labs developed around the area reflect the ancient commodification of geologic layers into valuable objects that are transported through material flows and sold with the use of coins (which are initially extracted from the subterranean layers of the Lavrion mines). 
	


Here, the design intervention of the Gardens of Economy emphasize the convergence of flows of matter across the landscape. Here, products and pottery is presented as conglomerated matter within the garden to illustrate the gathering and abundance of products in the area. The buried river of Eridanos that continues to flow within an ancient aqueduct is exposed as another vibrant condition and another kind of convergence.


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	GARDENS OF CULTURECommercial operations and the exchanges of products in the Agora of Monastiraki is connected to another infrastructural node, which is that of waste management. Surprisingly enough, a type of an ancient landfill is to be found within the Gardens of Culture and at the excavated site for the Acropolis (Ακρόπολη) Station. Here, the series of water wells carved deep into the bedrock pinching the subterranean aquifer are filled with black-glaze pottery which was discarded since the Mycenaean Period . Vertical water infrastructures of wells and cisterns are entangled here with earth-bedrock layers, stone walls from Roman-period residences and discarded pottery and metal products. Additionally, pilings and layers of ground matter demonstrate the presence and continuous use of main streets, which connect the one side of the city at the Acropolis hill with the outskirts of the city, from which matter becomes extracted from the earth’s crust and transported along the terrain of the territory.
	

The Gardens here are designed as a deep ground valley condition to reflect the prominence of the Acropolis hill in the city. Where one is reaching the sky and is positioned above the city, the proposed other is digging deep into the ground and investigating the substance of the city. The series of uncovered wells of water and discarded pottery products and marble sculptures stand as the columns of the garden in a pattern similar to those of the Parthenon. Ancient main streets that are layered with multiple layers of sediments over time are also uncovered as vertical volumes of cuts, emphasizing the relationship between this site of “landfill” and the connections to the places of extraction and to the Acropolis hill.




&#60;img width="4800" height="3000" width_o="4800" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/9f012b0949882ee61092f83b9d6d906075226820581ee4b630e07699e55262f6/230115-acropolis-section-perspective-low-res.jpg" data-mid="180428834" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/9f012b0949882ee61092f83b9d6d906075226820581ee4b630e07699e55262f6/230115-acropolis-section-perspective-low-res.jpg" /&#62;



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	GARDENS OF LIFEAn instance of that continuous flow of matter and transformation of geology of the territory is found at Evangelismos (Ευαγγελισμός) Station. Here, and as demonstrated by Korres’ maps of the ancient material flows, large pieces of marble are sliding from the Penteli mount and towards the Acropolis hill, following the sloped direction of the terrain . Additional flows of water are marking the site, another more ancient instance of Peisistratos’ aqueduct from 510 BC appearing on site, along with the captured Ilisos river continuing to flow within subterranean tunnels under the city. Once a place where live matter dominated the landscape in the form of plane trees and luscious gardens for philosophical contemplation is now hidden under the city with the infrastructural interventions for the management of water on site.
	


The proposed Gardens of Life are expressive of flows. The buried river of Ilisos emerges on the surface of the landscape as a series of fluctuating flows of water across the landscape, entangled with a series of marble pieces which are positioned on site to signify the ancient material flows from Penteli to the Acropolis. Plane trees are replanted across the site, reminiscent of the ancient luscious landscape of water creeks and large tree canopies that was used by Socrates as a place for contemplation.


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	<item>
		<title>Embracing Water</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Embracing-Water</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:50 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

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	EMBRACING WATEREngaging Cooperatives Towards Productive Landscapes
	Fall 2021
Harvard University Graduate School of Design
Advised by Lorena Bello Gomez
Collaboration with Lauren Duda, Ying Dong




	


















Situated in the former liquid territory of the Tochac lagoon and the settlement of Lázaro Cárdenas, our project aims to intertwine people, culture, and the earth's natural cycles in enriching the livelihoods of the region. Within an area that is subject to a continuous drought: one that is defined to be climatic and ecological, but also economic and cultural our main values are to: 

1. Preserve the cultural patrimony of the area by embracing traditional farming techniques of polycultures. 
2. Engage with the natural cycles 
3. Support the local economy by actively engaging the community and tourists 

 

	












&#60;img width="3600" height="3600" width_o="3600" height_o="3600" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3664c275bafc57d80a7f5928cf1f5ea5d23171196ec7b34b335ae98e43828270/220829-swot-maps-100dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281003" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/3664c275bafc57d80a7f5928cf1f5ea5d23171196ec7b34b335ae98e43828270/220829-swot-maps-100dpi.jpg" /&#62;
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Synthesis map (left) superimposing the risks of drought and climate change to the local archives of cultural heritage and traditional farming practices in the territory of Apan, along with a timeline drawing (right) illustrating the transformation of the territory from the pure geologic ground (bottom right) to the exisitng land use patterns of agricultural production (top right).&#38;nbsp;



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Βasemaps illustrating the larger hydrologic infrastructure that is draining the formerly liquid territory (top left), the extensive deforestation in the mountainous areas, the resulted soil erosion and the points of aquifer depletion (bottom left), the predominantly agricultural land use and the trasportation infrastructure (top right), and the ownership system of the territory which largely falls under the “ejido” governance system (bottom right).&#38;nbsp;
&#60;img width="3601" height="3601" width_o="3601" height_o="3601" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/bc14f90d061a82812b72303cc2c55b4de224d2d7a8058cea666eade92308567b/220625-masterplan-100dpi.jpg" data-mid="179280993" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/bc14f90d061a82812b72303cc2c55b4de224d2d7a8058cea666eade92308567b/220625-masterplan-100dpi.jpg" /&#62;
Proposed masterplan for Lazaro Cardenas.



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Transect of the proposal from the upland mountainous areas &#38;nbsp;to the lagoon (bottom) and systems and cycles that are embedded in the design proposal, including the water cycles, the restoration of biodiversity through reforestation, and the recovery of traditional farming practices (top).

&#60;img width="4800" height="3000" width_o="4800" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/156a937a61f6d91ac14cc1deafb48cfff55d7be5c760b78b765dbb359882f353/220908-implementation-plan-300dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281005" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/156a937a61f6d91ac14cc1deafb48cfff55d7be5c760b78b765dbb359882f353/220908-implementation-plan-300dpi.jpg" /&#62;
Plan of implementatio, which is color-coded here in three phases (bottom) and diagrams of the evolution of the landscape along the transect (top).&#38;nbsp;

&#60;img width="3000" height="3000" width_o="3000" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/28b1c3f9f42c46880cab7480258aebc04a556997b6ceae8c489b4ab89bbb78d9/220804-calendar-100dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281000" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/28b1c3f9f42c46880cab7480258aebc04a556997b6ceae8c489b4ab89bbb78d9/220804-calendar-100dpi.jpg" /&#62;








“Calendario de la Tierra y la Cultura” (Calendar of the Earth and of Culture), illustrating the yearly events that would take place at Lazaro Cardenas, connecting the agricultural patterns, to the climatic and water cycles, and to the place’s cultural heritage.



&#60;img width="2700" height="3300" width_o="2700" height_o="3300" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/dcd846d05fb7e918a546454008c330aa8200944e810507ab2ba2423ac4bf63a8/220817-navigation-chinampa-150dpi.png" data-mid="179280994" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/dcd846d05fb7e918a546454008c330aa8200944e810507ab2ba2423ac4bf63a8/220817-navigation-chinampa-150dpi.png" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2700" height="3300" width_o="2700" height_o="3300" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/c1f38162432e9f8fb2bd58318a747b7c4d8b14386471f291d3fb3055d5d433a2/220817-terraced-farming-150dpi.png" data-mid="179280995" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/c1f38162432e9f8fb2bd58318a747b7c4d8b14386471f291d3fb3055d5d433a2/220817-terraced-farming-150dpi.png" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2700" height="3300" width_o="2700" height_o="3300" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4e57af093e1abd57957742cb9404df14ebf2dd42079b90f9ee96da0f2b4d13a8/220816-agriculture-150dpi.png" data-mid="179280996" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4e57af093e1abd57957742cb9404df14ebf2dd42079b90f9ee96da0f2b4d13a8/220816-agriculture-150dpi.png" /&#62;
&#60;img width="2700" height="3300" width_o="2700" height_o="3300" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/49d73473845f10432181cdc6a625be8f3951f74f2b923b8a18f5859f2248716e/220817-agroforestry-150dpi.png" data-mid="179280997" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/49d73473845f10432181cdc6a625be8f3951f74f2b923b8a18f5859f2248716e/220817-agroforestry-150dpi.png" /&#62;
Series of posters illustrating the various yearly events (included in the calendar) which would engage all the territories along the transect of the design proposal, from the mountains to the agricultural fields, to the urban settlement, and to the lagoon</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Observatory of Material Change</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Observatory-of-Material-Change</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:53 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Observatory-of-Material-Change</guid>

		<description>
	OBSERVATORY OF MATERIAL CHANGECENTER FOR THE POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS
	Fall 2020Harvard University Graduate School of DesignAdvised by Rosalea Monacella






	


















The project
proposes the establishment of the federal agency US National Observatory of
Material Change, and its New Bedford-based chapter Center for the
Polychlorinated Biphenyls.



Both
organizations are focused on Material Change, which occurs in parallel to
Climate Change and is defined as the radical transformation of the planet’s
surficial materiality as a result of anthropogenic actions. Their work supports
the monitoring of the terrestrial and aquatic contamination from both scientific
and cultural perspectives.



At a national
scale, the agency’s scientific efforts are developing methods for the biological
metabolism of the toxic chemicals, in order to reduce biodiversity loss and
negative health effects. Meanwhile, the agency’s cultural work is re-evaluating
the materially-altered—contaminated—landscapes, changing their designation from
“waste site” to “Material Change Heritage Site”. While these sites are chosen
to be remediated—when possible—, they are also recognized for their significant
contribution of archaeological and geologic evidence for the history of
Material Change.&#38;nbsp;

	



In New Bedford, the Center
for the Polychlorinated Biphenyls is supporting the documentation and
remediation of the PCB-altered landscapes along the Upper Harbor. The proposed
landscape is exhibiting moments of transformation and metabolism of PCBs, but
also of archaeological and geologic surveys that collect evidence of the collapsed
local/national and human/geologic histories of the 20th century.












&#60;img width="4800" height="3000" width_o="4800" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/abff3989907aa5a3e79787f979a53e27845a6af4f08b1e87e9bfce1fb82f5442/221003-us-map-timeline.jpg" data-mid="179281046" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/abff3989907aa5a3e79787f979a53e27845a6af4f08b1e87e9bfce1fb82f5442/221003-us-map-timeline.jpg" /&#62;Map of Material Change in the U.S. Territory. White dots illustrate the current Superfund Sites and black crosses the current EPA-approved PCBs-waste management facilities. White areas are determined by the current Superfund sites and are superimposed on the current geologic layers to illustrate the new layer of Material Change and the Anthropocene.&#38;nbsp;











&#60;img width="9600" height="5400" width_o="9600" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/8a355cf9c297beefa32ed9e0ec0e2511b97a6e9e5b4812f84e4406fc103b0987/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_05.jpg" data-mid="179281027" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/8a355cf9c297beefa32ed9e0ec0e2511b97a6e9e5b4812f84e4406fc103b0987/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_05.jpg" /&#62;Traces of Material Change through time and space, involving the PCB production in Anniston, Alabama and Sauget, Illinois, their use in New Bedford, MA and then their disposal in Belleville, Michigan.












&#60;img width="2700" height="2700" width_o="2700" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/6d3149ba1487435675e6b08694f7331742be0ac13655cbc18b6625cd158c62be/220831-stakeholder-diagram.jpg" data-mid="179281041" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/6d3149ba1487435675e6b08694f7331742be0ac13655cbc18b6625cd158c62be/220831-stakeholder-diagram.jpg" /&#62;



















Spheres of Stakeholders involved in the PCB contamination, but also its proposed biological and vegetative remediation, from an individual to a planetary level.







&#60;img width="9584" height="5400" width_o="9584" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/de1cc81e7e40718efde20804a24da9c262c969d2d0a870be4225defba127ccad/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_08.jpg" data-mid="179281031" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/de1cc81e7e40718efde20804a24da9c262c969d2d0a870be4225defba127ccad/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_08.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="9575" height="2345" width_o="9575" height_o="2345" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d0a71b052b6f4a905fadeb477308572c0eab5d0260a1ba31bc5f01f747defdd5/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_09.jpg" data-mid="179281029" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/d0a71b052b6f4a905fadeb477308572c0eab5d0260a1ba31bc5f01f747defdd5/Vollas-Maria_1211_Final-Review-Presentation_2020_Page_09.jpg" /&#62;Taxonomy that documents the particular PCBs that have contaminated New Bedford (labeled as Aroclors), current strategies for collection and screening of PCBs as well as various recent examples and experiments of phytoremediation and microbial metabolism of PCBs.



&#60;img width="4800" height="2700" width_o="4800" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/dcfe3878bc25ffaa7ea99c04df67b41c90f3bd38e7f40fa0a39fff18e1604434/220926-new-bedford-site-map-300-dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281045" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/dcfe3878bc25ffaa7ea99c04df67b41c90f3bd38e7f40fa0a39fff18e1604434/220926-new-bedford-site-map-300-dpi.jpg" /&#62;Map illustrates the contamination of the Harbor of New Bedford with PCBs, with the Upper Harbor being the most contaminated by the industry Aerovox Corp. The map also illustrates with crosses the various waste-management facilities as well as the various aquifers and water bodies, arguing that contamination is ultimately uncontrollable and subject to the various water flows across the site.
&#60;img width="2400" height="3000" width_o="2400" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/33bea28cd55171fcc831cfdae0f41efa353b20d0f3f23af8d0d066d54f55d470/220818-site-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281042" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/33bea28cd55171fcc831cfdae0f41efa353b20d0f3f23af8d0d066d54f55d470/220818-site-plan.jpg" /&#62;Site plan of the proposed Center for the Polychlorinated Biphenyls, located in the Upper Harbor of New Bedford, MA. The design proposal includes the creation of pools for the microbial remediation of PCBs, the addition of vegetative layers for additional remediation, areas of excavation, and archaeological and geological surveys on site.




&#60;img width="4800" height="5400" width_o="4800" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/97f4ee7f51726f6793d64171f9a40884ad4baaf7c3ce2b7cc5c26d7a7aed0b8d/201229-belleville-site-plan-600-dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281034" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/97f4ee7f51726f6793d64171f9a40884ad4baaf7c3ce2b7cc5c26d7a7aed0b8d/201229-belleville-site-plan-600-dpi.jpg" /&#62;While in New Bedford there are opportunities for the remediation of PCBs and the investment in a less contaminated future, the Waste Management Facility in Belleville, MI is doomed to remain highly contaminated. It is proposed, though, that the site is decomissioned as a waste management facility and it becomes an archival area that has collected and indexed the Material Change that is happening throughout the US territory.




&#60;img width="4800" height="2700" width_o="4800" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/59a16b5d91e2b4cfe54e844fb2d3ef5670d7799df5265d9adce3302fa8f3658e/201229-site-plan-closeup-1_pools-300-dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281035" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/59a16b5d91e2b4cfe54e844fb2d3ef5670d7799df5265d9adce3302fa8f3658e/201229-site-plan-closeup-1_pools-300-dpi.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="4800" height="3000" width_o="4800" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/abc4f0b527ef9dcc9be0fa8cd1b865ab9fdf90d766f8eaa60233abe6434e8e9e/220926-pools.jpg" data-mid="179281044" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/abc4f0b527ef9dcc9be0fa8cd1b865ab9fdf90d766f8eaa60233abe6434e8e9e/220926-pools.jpg" /&#62;Back in New Bedford, MA, the microbial pools and vegetative layers metabolize and remediate the PCB contamination on site.&#60;img width="4800" height="2700" width_o="4800" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f02851521bf985eeb84a62284d785cbb0585a8bcae84dcc23ecc381e2b40dd0e/201229-site-plan-closeup-2_archaeological-site-300-dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281036" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f02851521bf985eeb84a62284d785cbb0585a8bcae84dcc23ecc381e2b40dd0e/201229-site-plan-closeup-2_archaeological-site-300-dpi.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="4800" height="3000" width_o="4800" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ce97250e53dbff29c04aa623195b9ae6a1464ac6c06cb1031cc44f3358dc7b26/220924-archaeology-geology.jpg" data-mid="179281043" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ce97250e53dbff29c04aa623195b9ae6a1464ac6c06cb1031cc44f3358dc7b26/220924-archaeology-geology.jpg" /&#62;While the remediation on site is metabolizing and erasing PCBs, certain excavation sites in current industrial buildings uncover more contaminants that reveal knowledge for archaeological and geological surveys. In the larger transformation of PCBs on site, these surveys become places of preservation of artefacts that reveal the 20th century environmental history.

&#60;img width="4800" height="2700" width_o="4800" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/6588461ae6415b501c7885ebd58ab9c5c198a67793cecf15727596cd8d57662a/201229-site-plan-closeup-3_observatory-300-dpi.jpg" data-mid="179281037" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/6588461ae6415b501c7885ebd58ab9c5c198a67793cecf15727596cd8d57662a/201229-site-plan-closeup-3_observatory-300-dpi.jpg" /&#62;The processes of excavation, remediation and archaeolgical/geological surveys of the site are tracked and monitored by the Observatory of the Center for Polychlorinated Biphenyls.&#38;nbsp;

</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Terra Incognita</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Terra-Incognita</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:59 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Terra-Incognita</guid>

		<description>
	TERRA INCOGNITA
A MUSEUM FOR THE HISTORY OF THE EARTH ON THE MOON
	Spring 2019
Bachelor of Architecture ThesisRensselaer Polytechnic InstituteAdvised by Chris Perry




	How can Architecture engage in outer space artificial structures, introducing a notion of sensibility to a
technological structure?


How can a satellite view raise awareness regarding issues of Anthropocene and decay of the natural environment? &#38;nbsp;How can we utilize extraterrestrial structures produced by

scientifi c organizations for cultural significance?


We’re in the verge of moving to outer space. What is the future of the Earth? What could be the narrative then? Is Earth
rotten already or will be?



Terra Incognita, Latin term meaning unknown land, was originally introduced in Ptolemy’s Geography c. 150 &#38;nbsp;to define regions of the world that have not yet been
cartographically registered and therefore remain unknown
or unexplored parts of the world.



	

In the 21st century, under the surveillance and mappin of satellites and other monitoring and scanning devices, hardly anything can still remain unknown an unregistered in our encyclopedia of data. What remains a mystery isn’t so much anymore the static morphological features of our planet, but rather the dynamic interaction between humans and human-made environments of the Anthropocene with the rest of the animal populations and the natural landscape.
Terra Incognita is reintroduced in the field to raise awareness regarding our incapability to perceive and analyze in depth such complex phenomena as well as our failure to realize our truly close connection to nature and our current derailment from nature’s trajectory andevolution. Serving as a museum and educational center, Terra Incognita uses the technology of satellites to project the interactions and dynamic systems that currently exist on the Earth’s surface, raising a level of understanding, as we envision our reality within the ecology of the planet.




&#60;img width="3000" height="2001" width_o="3000" height_o="2001" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/9f18ac799ffe241128f8ab137629e1a81e7e559dac7c7296db4dde7da8038759/19s_fp_perry_vollasm-003.jpg" data-mid="179281097" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/9f18ac799ffe241128f8ab137629e1a81e7e559dac7c7296db4dde7da8038759/19s_fp_perry_vollasm-003.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="3000" height="2000" width_o="3000" height_o="2000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/b13c25a3389e1bc6f3b648b35ab4e0adcda6b5934b08b92acbe43994b6775b5d/19s_fp_perry_vollasm-011.jpg" data-mid="179281098" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/b13c25a3389e1bc6f3b648b35ab4e0adcda6b5934b08b92acbe43994b6775b5d/19s_fp_perry_vollasm-011.jpg" /&#62;

Photographs of the sectional model of Terra Incognita


	

&#60;img width="2105" height="2107" width_o="2105" height_o="2107" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/bdb12d4936fea6e8bcb02eec3b68c92c7c9abb8164e409d5e1e606971a39495b/180217-marius-hills-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281116" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/bdb12d4936fea6e8bcb02eec3b68c92c7c9abb8164e409d5e1e606971a39495b/180217-marius-hills-plan.jpg" /&#62;

	

&#60;img width="9000" height="2700" width_o="9000" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/23022e58f00af7da4fe2fbacbc5b1766c4444ecb4ab71ebaa9de0df85af234d8/190217-Transverse-Section.jpg" data-mid="179281099" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/23022e58f00af7da4fe2fbacbc5b1766c4444ecb4ab71ebaa9de0df85af234d8/190217-Transverse-Section.jpg" /&#62;

&#60;img width="9000" height="2700" width_o="9000" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/76b9aa4d532b861d23fa70d83c3832d16316cb3e9e8ec5fda86a8fea86f04468/190217-Longitudinal-Section.jpg" data-mid="179281100" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/76b9aa4d532b861d23fa70d83c3832d16316cb3e9e8ec5fda86a8fea86f04468/190217-Longitudinal-Section.jpg" /&#62;

	
	

&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/32702dd7033f5581163eb7a14796b86a1a55f3d25f08665d0b8618189197407f/190416-1_birth-of-earth-elevation.jpg" data-mid="179281101" border="0" data-scale="100" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/32702dd7033f5581163eb7a14796b86a1a55f3d25f08665d0b8618189197407f/190416-1_birth-of-earth-elevation.jpg" /&#62;&#38;nbsp;I. Birth of Earth


&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d6c20f8ca1c18b5410299cb4c9e8ed41043f275249861cd3531ed03b3dac2f09/190416-2_creation-of-life-elevation_2.jpg" data-mid="179281103" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/d6c20f8ca1c18b5410299cb4c9e8ed41043f275249861cd3531ed03b3dac2f09/190416-2_creation-of-life-elevation_2.jpg" /&#62;II. Creation of Life


&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/18d20a9494c1668796e723fa9871be23a45e1386a4a064122f6504f9aaa64da9/190416-3_from-desert-to-snowball-earth-elevation_2.jpg" data-mid="179281106" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/18d20a9494c1668796e723fa9871be23a45e1386a4a064122f6504f9aaa64da9/190416-3_from-desert-to-snowball-earth-elevation_2.jpg" /&#62;
III. From Desert to Snowball Earth

&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5e17130c68438f57e74687ae327d98303e5cabe059abcd7eb83a4f4f35252387/190416-4_earthrise-elevation.jpg" data-mid="179281107" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/5e17130c68438f57e74687ae327d98303e5cabe059abcd7eb83a4f4f35252387/190416-4_earthrise-elevation.jpg" /&#62;
IV. Earthrise

&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/c77fc140e12acedfc991a74e035f77b4bc9fd70cd0b8027ec90ab4f14254a170/190416-5_cambrian-explosion-elevation_2.jpg" data-mid="179281111" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/c77fc140e12acedfc991a74e035f77b4bc9fd70cd0b8027ec90ab4f14254a170/190416-5_cambrian-explosion-elevation_2.jpg" /&#62;V. Cambrian Explosion &#38;amp; Permian Extinction
&#60;img width="5400" height="5400" width_o="5400" height_o="5400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5b953d848098aa5938af62ab0553343a05e32bdec5538684fb929e4b5d4e1682/190416-6_dinosaur-world-elevation_2.jpg" data-mid="179281114" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/5b953d848098aa5938af62ab0553343a05e32bdec5538684fb929e4b5d4e1682/190416-6_dinosaur-world-elevation_2.jpg" /&#62;VI. Dinosaur World &#38;amp; Jurassic Extinction

&#60;img width="5400" height="5401" width_o="5400" height_o="5401" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a6d05a130a49478eede84642bd0fa471e2010f2622314e48e975e0e834f62180/190416-7_beginning-of-mankind-elevation_2.jpg" data-mid="179281115" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/a6d05a130a49478eede84642bd0fa471e2010f2622314e48e975e0e834f62180/190416-7_beginning-of-mankind-elevation_2.jpg" /&#62;VII. Beginnings of Mankind


&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5d29e75f73f06a4aa46c2125f2ede2f36160f46d836cb5bf79f1e0f51ce7317c/190416-1_birth-of-earth-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281102" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/5d29e75f73f06a4aa46c2125f2ede2f36160f46d836cb5bf79f1e0f51ce7317c/190416-1_birth-of-earth-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a79ce180cd8eb4bfc4f35c91992c41e049fc9a547bb1cebf81101ce29af89511/190416-2_creation-of-life-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281104" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/a79ce180cd8eb4bfc4f35c91992c41e049fc9a547bb1cebf81101ce29af89511/190416-2_creation-of-life-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/aa7f1ff9d804906fc79e2e7ca4aa12d4ca0f0338f1aa14146b5f82d9324b4937/190416-3_from-desert-to-snowball-earth-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281105" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/aa7f1ff9d804906fc79e2e7ca4aa12d4ca0f0338f1aa14146b5f82d9324b4937/190416-3_from-desert-to-snowball-earth-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fb1b4ed3847ce7706d63d5e1c5b80c17e6c7afab1447c41a253af522e3bb48b7/190416-4_earthrise-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281108" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/fb1b4ed3847ce7706d63d5e1c5b80c17e6c7afab1447c41a253af522e3bb48b7/190416-4_earthrise-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fbd06ca1c8f23d05c2b6d476f2f81de54b02a21abd2989030bb4622a74f5a16a/190416-5_cambrian-explosion-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281109" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/fbd06ca1c8f23d05c2b6d476f2f81de54b02a21abd2989030bb4622a74f5a16a/190416-5_cambrian-explosion-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f204c97be24acc1048ca69204d2e1b16a669275f39ad678c08a3999118cd58ca/190416-6_dinosaur-world-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281112" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f204c97be24acc1048ca69204d2e1b16a669275f39ad678c08a3999118cd58ca/190416-6_dinosaur-world-plan.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="5400" height="4500" width_o="5400" height_o="4500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/97abfc74de072c03f724f5012af728a128db5c598fc7602269c910a9f9877cec/190416-7_beginning-of-mankind-plan.jpg" data-mid="179281113" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/97abfc74de072c03f724f5012af728a128db5c598fc7602269c910a9f9877cec/190416-7_beginning-of-mankind-plan.jpg" /&#62;

&#60;img width="12000" height="6083" width_o="12000" height_o="6083" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/52c8541d4099eff21e3299a2dc0fe40577c77ae88464703b85c563943f6c9d20/190208-earth-timeline-image-1.jpg" data-mid="179281117" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/52c8541d4099eff21e3299a2dc0fe40577c77ae88464703b85c563943f6c9d20/190208-earth-timeline-image-1.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="12000" height="6083" width_o="12000" height_o="6083" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/e07c36765f76971253d3147fbab839c03694aa74248bc2c8a0e92d214b128345/190208-earth-timeline-image-2.jpg" data-mid="179281118" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/e07c36765f76971253d3147fbab839c03694aa74248bc2c8a0e92d214b128345/190208-earth-timeline-image-2.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="12000" height="6083" width_o="12000" height_o="6083" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/01616d0dfe552f725e635cafb1480f71a92352cdcf03c9a68b5d20c6608c6250/190208-earth-timeline-image-3.jpg" data-mid="179281120" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/01616d0dfe552f725e635cafb1480f71a92352cdcf03c9a68b5d20c6608c6250/190208-earth-timeline-image-3.jpg" /&#62;
</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Coney Island Urban Park</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Coney-Island-Urban-Park</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:55 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Coney-Island-Urban-Park</guid>

		<description>
	CONEY ISLAND URBAN PARK
	Spring 2018 
Design Development Studio 
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 
Advised by Lonn Combs, Gabrielle Brainard 
Collaboration with Luis Guardado




	
The project proposes an urban park as a major central point of culture and education for both residents and visitors in Coney Island, NY. Considering the history of Coney Island as a main touristic destination with major commercial uses, our aim is to create a central hub for locals with more secluded and intimate public areas. 

By elevating and submerging building volumes, the area of the ground level becomes an easily accessible public park with many sitting areas and green areas&#38;nbsp;of native plant species. The building envelope is defined by a complex structure that supports cantilevered elements, large glass voids in between spaces and diagonal cuts, creating a majestic space that is offered to the local community. 
	


The urban park accomodates three main programmatic uses: an auditorium, an educational center and a public library. These uses are supplemented with additional facilities of workshops, classrooms and other community spaces.



	
	

&#60;img width="4500" height="3000" width_o="4500" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/76e8f38c2e41d7aa90279850f010a86983ab9ac61ea2c3ebf40e1a513c00f07e/230429-Birdview-compressed.jpg" data-mid="179281048" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/76e8f38c2e41d7aa90279850f010a86983ab9ac61ea2c3ebf40e1a513c00f07e/230429-Birdview-compressed.jpg" /&#62;Aerial view of the Coney Island Urban Park, situated between the boardwalk and the city. 
&#60;img width="2400" height="3000" width_o="2400" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a9882e26f4cfd3f2e21abd72b38a1984a18afb44053ce1fb74d6549697ec5fac/230428-Site-Plan.jpg" data-mid="179281051" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/a9882e26f4cfd3f2e21abd72b38a1984a18afb44053ce1fb74d6549697ec5fac/230428-Site-Plan.jpg" /&#62;


&#60;img width="4200" height="2700" width_o="4200" height_o="2700" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/cb98884498f3805d037b6d9e7590a2ded2e5902a468dd4dc0c9655c9a26381fa/230424-Library-Hole.jpg" data-mid="179281050" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/cb98884498f3805d037b6d9e7590a2ded2e5902a468dd4dc0c9655c9a26381fa/230424-Library-Hole.jpg" /&#62;Ground-level perspective of the north entrance.


&#60;img width="3639" height="2571" width_o="3639" height_o="2571" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/098f5899ee92eed607acc7c6c536e1b71fd46443e7e4bf0fba49100dd88075cd/230424-Entrances.jpg" data-mid="179281049" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/098f5899ee92eed607acc7c6c536e1b71fd46443e7e4bf0fba49100dd88075cd/230424-Entrances.jpg" /&#62;
Ground-level perspective of the east entrance.




	&#60;img width="2400" height="6000" width_o="2400" height_o="6000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3a253638544460fa9e424ab244b356c74d455b3c6e99f5d41cc73dfce78bb34c/230428-0.jpg" data-mid="179281053" border="0" data-scale="100" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/3a253638544460fa9e424ab244b356c74d455b3c6e99f5d41cc73dfce78bb34c/230428-0.jpg" /&#62;
	&#60;img width="2400" height="6000" width_o="2400" height_o="6000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/e20ec0c1607acc15abf371344c5e2dc9a7107cb2625d9acd912734bd7b3e9c4b/230428-2.jpg" data-mid="179281054" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/e20ec0c1607acc15abf371344c5e2dc9a7107cb2625d9acd912734bd7b3e9c4b/230428-2.jpg" /&#62;
	&#60;img width="2400" height="6000" width_o="2400" height_o="6000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fe1347ebcc12f11537653377ffae5bb9638f35e332561690825e45a11be46b0d/230428-4.jpg" data-mid="179281055" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/fe1347ebcc12f11537653377ffae5bb9638f35e332561690825e45a11be46b0d/230428-4.jpg" /&#62;

Plan drawings of the ground (left), second (middle) and fourth (right) floors.


&#60;img width="2400" height="3000" width_o="2400" height_o="3000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4bc80f141451385761d9a2bd3c66da02426e879eee1f8a6a295f260fa92113a5/230429-Facade-Drawings.jpg" data-mid="179281056" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4bc80f141451385761d9a2bd3c66da02426e879eee1f8a6a295f260fa92113a5/230429-Facade-Drawings.jpg" /&#62;Facade details (left) and elevation drawing of the auditorium (right).</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Perceptions of Plant Life in Indigenous Amazonian Cultures</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Perceptions-of-Plant-Life-in-Indigenous-Amazonian-Cultures</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:56 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Perceptions-of-Plant-Life-in-Indigenous-Amazonian-Cultures</guid>

		<description>
	PERCEPTIONS OF PLANT LIFE IN INDIGENOUS AMAZONIAN CULTURES
	Spring 2020Harvard University Graduate School of DesignAdvised by Danielle Choi





	From
1941 to 1952, Richard Evans Schultes conducted ethnobotanical research and fieldwork
in the Amazon, collecting and indexing thousands of plant species. Through photographs,
maps, field notes, manuscripts and other materials, he documented the landscape
practices in the Amazonian forest, recording the native plant species and their
use by the indigenous populations. The archives illustrate a lifestyle based on
plants, from the stimulating drinks that allow them to hunt and travel all day,
to therapeutic remedies for sickness, to poisonous darts and to spiritual
ceremonies. Schultes documented much of the extensive indigenous knowledge for
plants, preserving a patrimony of ecologies and human practices that currently
face processes of erasure and quite literally eradication.


	









&#60;img width="3500" height="2333" width_o="3500" height_o="2333" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7a0fe4eb28e4614c58ab4837dd59f5571e04d6ec68e48e13edd0ff78bfbd7c7e/Main_Single.png" data-mid="179281062" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/7a0fe4eb28e4614c58ab4837dd59f5571e04d6ec68e48e13edd0ff78bfbd7c7e/Main_Single.png" /&#62;Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes on the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.






&#60;img width="3500" height="2625" width_o="3500" height_o="2625" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/aef55a6d5ab8b3be621319fb5a4ceb9f9949789851ca0fed72318ecacc5ebe56/02_Single.png" data-mid="179281057" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/aef55a6d5ab8b3be621319fb5a4ceb9f9949789851ca0fed72318ecacc5ebe56/02_Single.png" /&#62;


















Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes &#38;nbsp;on the Sibundoy Valley in the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.







&#60;img width="3500" height="2625" width_o="3500" height_o="2625" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/bb142234c38b5488da5a9fa3173d5f1629f8af934a0ff45d81415772de22269c/03_Single.png" data-mid="179281058" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/bb142234c38b5488da5a9fa3173d5f1629f8af934a0ff45d81415772de22269c/03_Single.png" /&#62;Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes on the Kofan people in the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.













&#60;img width="3500" height="2625" width_o="3500" height_o="2625" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/34e6e5e4d0f208c6c7a6f2c575cdfe58719640ecd78b6d0c6488286802798dc1/04_Single.png" data-mid="179281059" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/34e6e5e4d0f208c6c7a6f2c575cdfe58719640ecd78b6d0c6488286802798dc1/04_Single.png" /&#62;


















Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes on the Witotos in the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.














&#60;img width="3200" height="2400" width_o="3200" height_o="2400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/1b3c80e6c338f081226f6a73805123bc63b047ac7df71b9fbcd03e0badb13933/05_Single.png" data-mid="179281060" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/1b3c80e6c338f081226f6a73805123bc63b047ac7df71b9fbcd03e0badb13933/05_Single.png" /&#62;
















Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes at the upper Rio Apaporis in the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.








&#60;img width="3200" height="2400" width_o="3200" height_o="2400" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/8936a872ed6eab4f3d80ef1854248c722721ead7cf9b526c1dfd532a5776220b/06_Single.png" data-mid="179281061" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/8936a872ed6eab4f3d80ef1854248c722721ead7cf9b526c1dfd532a5776220b/06_Single.png" /&#62;

















Composition of archival findings and writings by Richard Evans Schultes at the lower Rio Apaporis in the Colombian Amazon. Drawing by author.





</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Viscera Urbana</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Viscera-Urbana</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:02:58 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Viscera-Urbana</guid>

		<description>
	VISCERA URBANA

VISUALIZING CAMBRIDGE THROUGH BODILY DESIRES
	Fall 2019Harvard University Graduate School of DesignAdvised by Robert PietruskoCollaboration with Jaewon Lee, Sheng Yan







	Urban environments are shaped through our bodily functions and desires. Restaurants are serving our stomachs, residences and hotels our need for sleep, parks satisfy our eyes, bike paths vitalize our heart, lungs and muscles, concerts and performances are music to our ears, libraries are food for our brain. The concept of the city as an organism is transformed to become a landscape of dispersed human organs, expressing the locations and durations of human activities, or rather our physical needs.

	Viscera Urbana aims to showcase the shared experience of bodily activities of the 2019 class. By selectively using spatial, temporal, and experiential data as co-variables, a set of “organs” emerge, the intertwining of their state of co-habitation reﬂects the multisensorial experiences that deﬁne us the moments worth our remembrance. Each of the various colors represent an organ, including the brain, lungs, heart, stomach, eyes, ears, and reproduction organs.





&#60;img width="6000" height="4000" width_o="6000" height_o="4000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/00cd200732d07e27406c92ed10c362fe1d3acbfc1e803544581857fc32480047/191108-elevation.jpg" data-mid="179281090" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/00cd200732d07e27406c92ed10c362fe1d3acbfc1e803544581857fc32480047/191108-elevation.jpg" /&#62;





&#60;img width="2000" height="1500" width_o="2000" height_o="1500" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/58ecb9529a09af5f1fc1df36291a7ed8ec4819216007cebd446187f5f4affb58/191108-bottom-view-compressed.jpg" data-mid="180447731" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/58ecb9529a09af5f1fc1df36291a7ed8ec4819216007cebd446187f5f4affb58/191108-bottom-view-compressed.jpg" /&#62;




&#60;img width="6000" height="4000" width_o="6000" height_o="4000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/e089bbd8a0f98bee897e279218cd5dabdd673c82469de4f9e056e819650b84ba/191108-detail-1_reduced.jpg" data-mid="179281092" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/e089bbd8a0f98bee897e279218cd5dabdd673c82469de4f9e056e819650b84ba/191108-detail-1_reduced.jpg" /&#62;




&#60;img width="6000" height="4000" width_o="6000" height_o="4000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7c510125fd2371045799861974cbc2794fcd852af415b105308a5332b473b57c/191108-detail-2_reduced.jpg" data-mid="179281093" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/7c510125fd2371045799861974cbc2794fcd852af415b105308a5332b473b57c/191108-detail-2_reduced.jpg" /&#62;




&#60;img width="6000" height="4000" width_o="6000" height_o="4000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/55761240d45788bcb5279230b4b99440b38dee2e3f2557ba75067c6f5915c8d2/191108-detail-3_reduced.jpg" data-mid="179281094" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/55761240d45788bcb5279230b4b99440b38dee2e3f2557ba75067c6f5915c8d2/191108-detail-3_reduced.jpg" /&#62;




&#60;img width="6000" height="4000" width_o="6000" height_o="4000" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/e846f0bf5fe0da1ce8483b9c4a4fc87ada297e4a9a68fc393f7ab4ed79c17aee/191108-elevation_reduced.jpg" data-mid="179281096" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/e846f0bf5fe0da1ce8483b9c4a4fc87ada297e4a9a68fc393f7ab4ed79c17aee/191108-elevation_reduced.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="4032" height="3024" width_o="4032" height_o="3024" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/628c9a2d85fad2164638edfb5fa96a2e2b7511066d1511c50e3f63ea6c4f4853/191108-bottom-view_reduced.jpg" data-mid="179281091" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/628c9a2d85fad2164638edfb5fa96a2e2b7511066d1511c50e3f63ea6c4f4853/191108-bottom-view_reduced.jpg" /&#62;
</description>
		
	</item>
		
		
	<item>
		<title>Warping Small Worlds</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Warping-Small-Worlds</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:03:02 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Warping-Small-Worlds</guid>

		<description>
	WARPING SMALL WORLDS
LIGHT PROJECTIONS OF OTHERWORDLY SMALL INVISIBLE REALITIES
	Fall 2018Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteAdvised by Yael Erel
Collaboration with Alexis Clarke








	
The capacity of light to travel through dimensions of space and time allows us to see further away from our spectrum, reaching the horizon of the minuscule reality.&#38;nbsp;

The “Warping Small Worlds” through a series of transformations not only explores the possibilities of observation and projection of microscopic realities through the filter of the lenses, but also the different ways of lighting the sample as well as projection of the captured image for the creation of a microscopic reality within the scale of our world.
The first type of transformation occurs in the observation and capturing of the microscopic image. Th e light is projected from various angles to expose different elements of the sample, from the front view to the shadows of the back and dark side of it. This is using the ability of light to expose the essence and nature of things through the pure reflection of light on the object or the more obscure projection of the shadows or silhouettes of it.&#38;nbsp;
The second type of transformation occurs during the projection of the captured microscopic image. Reflected surfaces are being used to project not only front flat views of the microscopic reality, but also stretched and distorted perspectival projections, leading to the illusion of a three-dimensional microscopic reality, within which we become fully submerged. The reality of the microscope is subdivided and transformed in threedimensional domains, fully integrating the user to the three-dimensional microscopic world.

	








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Presenting “Warping Small Worlds” with Alexis Clarke in December 2018 at Craive Lab, a 360-degree projection room. Photograph by Tanner Whitney, retrieved from Rensselaer Architecture publications.






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		<title>Visualizing the Accidental Radioactive Landscapes of Chernobyl</title>
				
		<link>https://mariavollas.com/Visualizing-the-Accidental-Radioactive-Landscapes-of-Chernobyl</link>

		<pubDate>Fri, 19 May 2023 14:03:04 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>Maria Vollas</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://mariavollas.com/Visualizing-the-Accidental-Radioactive-Landscapes-of-Chernobyl</guid>

		<description>
	VISUALIZING RADIOACTIVITY
REPRESENTATIONS OF CHERNOBYL’S LANDSCAPES
	Spring 2020Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and SciencesAdvised by Peter Galison






	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; It is recognized amongst the scientific community that we are transitioning towards the Anthropocene, a recently proposed geologic epoch that describes a state of the Earth marked by an increasing human agency. The observed stratigraphic, geological, chemical and ecological shifts of anthropogenic origins suggest that humans have reached the point where their scientific knowledge and agency suffices to irreversibly alter the face and fate of the planet. Such a premise can be particularly validated from a nuclear perspective and from the initial tests of atomic bombs that marked the human as a planetary agent. We’ve undoubtedly surpassed this threshold in 1945 with the Trinity test, the first detonation of a nuclear device conducted by the US Army, which released 21 kilotons of TNT and reached a height of 200m from the first 16 ms1. The photographs that captured the first seconds of the explosion show massive scales of spatial and temporal dimensions, with radical speeds of expansion and extensive light emanating from its center. The sublime presence of the nuclear bomb became significant proof that the planet’s fate is not only dependent on “objective” naturally occurring phenomena, but also on the “subjective” human desires.

	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Throughout the years, these “subjective” human desires were proved not only unpredictable but also false assumptions, decisions, mistakes. The same nuclear energy that initially provoked feelings of excitement for humanity’s achievements later proved to be beyond humanity’s control, particularly in the emergence of accidental radioactive landscapes. Incidents of explosions in nuclear energy plants such as the famous case of Chernobyl in former USSR in 1986 showcased that, although we’ve been educated to use nuclear power for energy, we do not yet fully know 2 its behavior and cannot fully control its consequences in the case of an accident. In Chernobyl, radionuclides quickly invaded the landscape, marking the soil, water and air as radioactive territories and immediately rendering them as uninhabitable and life-threatening sections of the Earth. The territory’s condition cannot be reversed by any human action and can only now be compared to geologic scales of time. Using the words of a local scientist, as quoted by the photographer Gerd Ludwig, we might as well post signs in the Zone that would read as “not intended for human habitation for 24,000 years”, which is the duration of the half-life of the plutonium 239.2 


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A series of photographs capturing the first seconds of the Trinity, the first detonation of a nuclear device, at Alamogordo, New Mexico in 1945. Retrieved by Los Alamos National Laboratory archives.


	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; In discussing our incapability to deal with the radical spatiotemporal dimensions of these repercussions, in the 1950s, Martin Heidegger introduced the term “enframing” to discuss the essence of modern technology. Referring to the limitations of our scientific knowledge with regards to natural phenomena, he discussed that we-humans are eventually challenged by nature more than nature can be challenged by us, and proposed that in these circumstances, it is the art that can function as the “saving power” in this problematic relationship.3 It is true that in the case of radioactive landscapes, we not only lack the knowledge and ability to revert the ramifications of our acts on the planet, but we also lack the more preliminary ability to perceive, visualize and interpret the repercussions of our acts. Similarly to the Anthropocene, the accidental radioactive landscapes are far beyond our spectrum of perception, presenting moments of invisibilities and blurriness that exceed our capacities to visualize and comprehend them. The invisibility of events such as the Chernobyl accident is not only crucial in ensuring human safety, it is problematic in allowing us to comprehend its dimensions.  
	Nuclear accidents pose not only issues of radical environmental devastation, but also visual representation.4 Chernobyl is an extensively studied radioactive landscape since its birth in 1986 and it can only make us wonder what have been the various attempts and methods developed to visualize the invisible radioactive forces. Let’s unravel the various modes of representation and comprehension that have been developed from the scientific and artistic domains to visualize the irreversible radioactive landscapes that have changed the physiognomy of the planet. Through the knowledge of the representation of the local radioactivities of Chernobyl, which present the most extreme and radical manifestations of the Anthropocene in its peculiar spatial and temporal scale and invisibility, we can begin to speculate and develop knowledge for the visualization and comprehension of the larger framework of this new geologic epoch.


&#60;img width="3000" height="2014" width_o="3000" height_o="2014" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/06c07b5b0e72338ce962614253659bb15171049e9bd991a198d7553b882ab50e/trinity-2.jpg" data-mid="179281173" border="0" data-scale="73" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/06c07b5b0e72338ce962614253659bb15171049e9bd991a198d7553b882ab50e/trinity-2.jpg" /&#62;General Leslie Groves and J. Robert Oppenheimer at the Trinity test site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Retrieved by Los Alamos National Laboratory archives.



	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; 
Nuclear power has sparked both the excitement as well as the fear and concern in the public domain. Earlier demonstrations of nuclear power are manifested through the first detonations of nuclear devices that show a majestic performance of human power in ground and air. Sparking the excitement of the human public through its sublime character in its presentation on the landscape and representation on the photographic films, the atomic bomb became a symbol of the power of countries and federations in an era of WWII and the subsequent Cold War. A preliminary excitement, though, was soon to be followed by the concerns for the devastating repercussions of the bombings. The German philosopher Günther Anders was particularly focused on thinking of the bombings and in the 1960s declared that there had been a metaphysical change in humans from the “genre of mortals”—or being fundamentally mortal—to the status of the “mortal genre”—or the fundamentally fatal—, a position that was held throughout the 1980s.5 &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; 
Such a view was particularly manifested in the case of the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant disaster of 1986. The majestic visualizations of nuclear power are radically oppositional to the documentations of the explosion in the case of the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant in April 1986. Throughout the night of the 25-26th of April, the routine reactor tests led to complete failure. The excessive and uncontrolled rise of one of the reactor’s power production resulted in the severe accident and explosion that destroyed most of the Reactor Four, including its complete interior and the building’s four million pound concrete roofing.6 The fire that emerged from the explosion led to an eruption of more than two thousand degrees Celcius, melting the surrounding cement, steel and iron structures and machinery and blending it with the uranium and plutonium into highly radioactive lava that covered all the blown flours of the complex.7 The devastating environmental and human effects appeared staggering in the initial calculations and speculations. Initial estimates included thirty-one fatalities, although such numbers were challenged later on by reports such as the 1989 Moscow News estimate of the 250 or the various 1990s inclusive approximations of over 
	300
victims. The morning of April 26th saw radical destruction of physical structures as well as increasing mobility of human bodies that were instructed to evacuate in the periphery of the 30km from the accident. From the first few days, there was a relocation of up to 135,000 people, with the 50,000 of them originating from the cities of Chernobyl and Pripyat.8 The radical movement of people in the interior of the territory was accompanied by a series of maps that included calculations of distances between habitable areas and nuclear fallout, as well as preliminary radiation measurements that would define low and high-risk zones. Eventually, these parameters drawn on the maps would establish the first evacuation plans for the neighboring city of Pripyat and the surrounding villages, as well as the subsequent legally imposed Nuclear Exclusion Zone, as a permanent delineation of hazardous territory on the landscape.

&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Contrary to the radical interior movement and delineation of the landscape in the USSR, Chernobyl’s radioactivity did not initially present itself in the western world. The neighboring countries outside USSR were not informed by the state’s official documents and announcements, but instead by radioactive measurements taken 1,100 kilometers away from the explosion at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant in Sweden. There, in the morning of April 28th 1986, the radiation appeared in a routine radiation dose monitoring in the technician’s shoes and surprised all the workers as it seemed to be originating from contamination outside of the plant.9 Worried about the possibility of a radiation leak in the Swedish nuclear plant, the local technicians conducted further examinations of the surrounding ground, identifying particles on the grass that could be connected to the Soviet nuclear power plants. After further considerations of weather and wind patterns that occurred throughout that weekend, they verified their initial conclusion that the radioactive fallout originated from the USSR grounds. Two days after the explosion, their suspicions were ultimately verified, as the Soviet Union formally declares that there has been a nuclear accident.10






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Maps showing the dispersal of radiation on April 29th (left) and May 3rd, 1986 (right). Produced by UKAEKA, retrieved from book “Environmental management in the Soviet Union”.




	Contrary to the radical interior movement and delineation of the landscape in the USSR, Chernobyl’s radioactivity did not initially present itself in the western world. The neighboring countries outside USSR were not informed by the state’s official documents and announcements, but instead by radioactive measurements taken 1,100 kilometers away from the explosion at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant in Sweden. There, in the morning of April 28th 1986, the radiation appeared in a routine radiation dose monitoring in the technician’s shoes and surprised all the workers as it seemed to be originating from contamination outside of the plant.9 Worried about the 
	possibility of a radiation leak in the Swedish nuclear plant, the local technicians conducted further examinations of the surrounding ground, identifying particles on the grass that could be connected to the Soviet nuclear power plants. After further considerations of weather and wind patterns that occurred throughout that weekend, they verified their initial conclusion that the radioactive fallout originated from the USSR grounds. Two days after the explosion, their suspicions were ultimately verified, as the Soviet Union formally declares that there has been a nuclear accident.10







	&#60;img width="550" height="359" width_o="550" height_o="359" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/bd5483357ef8085c3adac9dd2ba6647e06af1702ddf8a01204e5efda0f46f40a/image034.jpg" data-mid="179281176" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/550/i/bd5483357ef8085c3adac9dd2ba6647e06af1702ddf8a01204e5efda0f46f40a/image034.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="514" height="366" width_o="514" height_o="366" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/b2e4ad4c2ecb0ac86ad19b4b30f26712a2edba2b64e10a2f70cd4d62c71caa0b/image035.jpg" data-mid="179281182" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/514/i/b2e4ad4c2ecb0ac86ad19b4b30f26712a2edba2b64e10a2f70cd4d62c71caa0b/image035.jpg" /&#62;&#60;img width="477" height="338" width_o="477" height_o="338" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fa307bf627818f1f3f3197a2d77a93e85bb46a648edf3bc746795d99a66b4b93/image036.jpg" data-mid="179281177" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/477/i/fa307bf627818f1f3f3197a2d77a93e85bb46a648edf3bc746795d99a66b4b93/image036.jpg" /&#62;
	
Map of the contamination of the territory of Ukraine 137 Cs as of 1987, according to Ukraine’s “Екоцентр” (Ecocenter).





Pollution map of the 137 Cs Exclusion Zone, according to Ukraine’s “Екоцентр” (Ecocenter).







Pollution map of the 90 Sr Exclusion Zone, according to Ukraine’s “Екоцентр” (Ecocenter).





	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; The preliminary maps of the various measurements and densities of radiation in and out of USSR do not illustrate the wishful thinking of the power of a state, but rather a status of chaos. The scientific visualizations speak about a free movement of radiation clouds that, unobstructed by any authority, wander around the European grounds. Nicola Shulman remembers the words of the Chernobyl tour guide, Olena, who talks about the disobedient and anarchic character of the gamma radiation that is invisible and thus superior to any state-determined checkpoints and borders. Although invisible, it is transparent in the ways that it equally impacts all people and resembles the “emblem of Soviet lies and incompetence, and a living metaphor—with all its language of leakage, fallout and incontinence—for the welcome collapse of Soviet control.”11&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; The particular political backdrop that managed the Chernobyl catastrophe played a significant role in selecting and curating the scientific observations and measurements that can be retrieved from the landscape, as well as its subsequent visual representations. For the radiation medicine that was developed by the United States and Europe, the doses were determined primarily by environmental monitoring that was oftentimes conducted remotely. The UN radiologists would use a radiation map of Chernobyl that 
	illustrates Roentgens and Sieverts in the landscape and compare the findings to earlier survivor life-span charts of the atomic bombs. The arguments on the 
safety of the radiation or the dosages of the medicines were, thus, largely based on environmental data and calculations that could be conducted remotely and away from the physical location of the accident. On the contrary, Soviet doctors were denied access to any radiation measurements of the many nuclear accidents that occurred throughout the Cold War, since such data remained classified and guarded by the KGB. Without the use of radiation maps and measurements, they were trained to determine medicine doses by closely studying the affected human body and examining the nervous system, the hormonal levels and the blood cells. The observation and monitoring of the patients on-site allowed them to discern the damage at even very low doses.12
&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; From the very first days of the accident, we see that multiple methods of observing, quantifying and visualizing radioactivity have been developed, from the radiation maps that delineate Exclusion Zones controlling people’s movement through georeferencing of collected measurements, to onsite medical examinations of the exposed-to-radiation human bodies. Throughout the years, scientists and artists have strived to form media that can represent the experience of this peculiar geography.











	&#60;img width="365" height="274" width_o="365" height_o="274" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7dc977fc7da946dc5967f7bfe67a0d223ad3341ffbd914036b73ec21417a5291/artur-kornayev_elephant-s-foot.jpg" data-mid="179281184" border="0" data-scale="100" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/365/i/7dc977fc7da946dc5967f7bfe67a0d223ad3341ffbd914036b73ec21417a5291/artur-kornayev_elephant-s-foot.jpg" /&#62;
	The “Elephant’s Foot”, one of the most radioactive elements in Chernobyl, was photographed by Artur Kornayev, the Deputy Director of the New Confinement, in 1996.



	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Initially, a very significant experiential component of the territory is the constant reminder of the radiation through the sounds and rhythms of the Geiger counters and dosimeters. The estimated spillage of radioactive waste sums up to around fifty to two-hundred million curies from the blown Reactor Four13, which remains detectable through its irregular expansion and dispersal in the surrounding area. The photographer Gerd Ludwig, in sharing with us his visit to the Zone, argues that his measuring equipment was extremely valuable in his journey, since even the guides that accompanied him 
	were not aware that certain areas were highly radioactive and unsafe. As he claims, they did not realize that radiation can move around as the wind blows the surface soil around.14 In a separate visit, Nicola Shulman states that her tour guide provided them with dosimeters, warming them that they will be continuously going off within the Zone, which is exceeding the warning level of radiation to which they were calibrated. Nicola could feel her dosimeter vibrating and beeping crazily in her clothes during a walk through an abandoned village.15









&#60;img width="1337" height="2126" width_o="1337" height_o="2126" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/dbb5c88eff256bf6668b7c0cdfcc9d300a03d22e744ace76e6b1fe31468e470a/body-parts-most-susceptible-to-radiation.jpg" data-mid="179281185" border="0" data-scale="71" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/dbb5c88eff256bf6668b7c0cdfcc9d300a03d22e744ace76e6b1fe31468e470a/body-parts-most-susceptible-to-radiation.jpg" /&#62;
	
&#60;img width="2480" height="3509" width_o="2480" height_o="3509" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/03e8bf843f02432e7a7313edf407a8bd1b3d0b796a6660a52b9ca074988fc7b2/body-parts-most-susceptible-to-radiation-translation.jpg" data-mid="179281179" border="0" data-scale="80" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/03e8bf843f02432e7a7313edf407a8bd1b3d0b796a6660a52b9ca074988fc7b2/body-parts-most-susceptible-to-radiation-translation.jpg" /&#62;

Notice explaining the health impacts that various levels of radiation exposure have on the human body. 
Original document in Russian (left) and translation in English (right).




	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; In these journeys, it is not only the sound but also the scenery of abandonment and decay that reveals the past catastrophe. After the evacuation, the Zone was left to decay, with the vegetation left to uncontrollably grow and take over the landscape. Daniel Bürkner suggests that the photographic attempts to represent the radioactive landscape often put forth an object that projects sociological and philosophical criticism, proposing a post-industrial nature taking over the established civilization. The Chernobyl disaster is depicted as nature’s act of revenge against the failed technological reality and human agency on the landscape. In the meantime, the “dichotomy between rural aesthetics and lethal contamination” reveals the massive environmental pollution, which is oftentimes projected as a “mythological transformation” of the land into an otherworldly strange new reality.16&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Igor Kostin was one the first photographers of Chernobyl’s radioactive scenes, becoming a major figure in the documentation of the immediate aftermath of the accident. He was present on-site from the first day after the nuclear explosion and was one of the few that recorded the initial acts of decontamination and changes that significantly altered the appearance of the  
	surrounding landscape. His photographs were opposed to the official Soviet policy that desired a showcasing of the heroic, victorious decontaminating
workers in the field17, the efforts for the obliteration of the accident and the industry’s marketing strategies that commercialized through projects such as the “Miss Atom” beauty contest an environmental and humanistic tragedy.18 This might also explain why his works were not published in the USSR until after the first few years. His focus was not on the political agendas associated with the disaster, but rather on developing strategies to capture the invisible effects of the contamination through symbolic indicators. Images of natural scenery that seemed to be liberated from the human effect and freely flourishing in the landscape would often be accompanied by the symbol of radiation that was used as a reminder for the contaminated context of Chernobyl. The depicted sceneries and strategies of representation of the industrial element resemble Jürgen Nefzger’s photographs of the “Fluffy Clouds” that bring forth rural landscapes and activities with a background of nuclear power plants.19 Bürkner suggests that this “ironic edge to the natural plenitude” is important for the representation of the contamination, which is not profane in the viewing of the landscape itself.20







	&#60;img width="1423" height="950" width_o="1423" height_o="950" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/c27baa65589e136779971b31fce9f472b756b785f5a1aa814a255cf7553d06e9/igor-kostin_liquidators.jpg" data-mid="179281180" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/c27baa65589e136779971b31fce9f472b756b785f5a1aa814a255cf7553d06e9/igor-kostin_liquidators.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1500" height="1009" width_o="1500" height_o="1009" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/de79ce479be69121ea81d08934f5b47f101bd3f271a06f522755e366027427f5/igor-kostin_moscow-clinic.jpg" data-mid="179281181" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/de79ce479be69121ea81d08934f5b47f101bd3f271a06f522755e366027427f5/igor-kostin_moscow-clinic.jpg" /&#62;


	Liquidators measure radiation levels within the 30 km Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. They use antiquated radiation counters, wear anti-chemical warfare suits that are unsuitable for protection against radioactivity and cover their faces with “pig muzzle” masks. Photographed by Igor Kostin in May 1986.







A doctor examines the patient in a sterile room at Moscow’s No. 6 Clinic. The examination is carried out in an individual, air-conditioned chamber via specially created openings to avoid direct contact and contamination. Photographed by Igor Kostin.





	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; The photographic visualizations of the radioactive zones are in accordance to the textual descriptions of the in-person experiences of Chernobyl’s landscape. Nicola describes what she saw in her visit as an anarchic reality that is dominated by an “unhusbanded nature”. In her words:“The grimness of a distant catastrophe can be hard to recollect when all around you the late-sleeping Ukrainian spring has finally jumped out of bed and is doing cartwheels around your head. Skeins of little birds weave patters in the sky. Birdsong rings from all directions. Wild roses burst out through stone, tree trunks absorb iron fences. It was hard to know if what we were looking at was hope or despair. What was certain is that this is a very unusual tourist site, having no curator to impose the ‘official version’, ‘nothing can be touched’—it is all radioactive—” 21&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Such a viewpoint was also shared by Robert Polidori in his book of photographic collections “Pripyat and Chernobyl—Zones of Exclusion”. The portrayed remnants of interior spaces are
accompanied by an image of nature that is flourishing, suggesting that it has become a victorious and superior agent within the decayed and abandoned civilization”.22 The excluded area is
represented as a symbol of a historic reversal, in which we are moving from the 
   
	industrial and technological reality back to the agrarian society of close
connection and dialogue with nature. Bürkner suggests that this sort of interpretation is, in fact, a paradox, since the depicted surface of nature is
hiding the reality of heavily contaminated soil, vegetables and fruit.23 One of the dangerous characteristics of radioactivity is perhaps this inability to quantify it to understand its scale and proportion from the visual perception and photographic representation. This property became the main concept for the photographic project “Atomgrad (Nature Abhors a Vacuum)” by artists Jane and Louise Wilson. The collection of large-format images of abandoned sites throughout Chernobyl and Pripyat as a result of their field trip to Ukraine in 2010 is capturing our inability to measure radioactivity in space. In each photograph, a large black-and-white ruler is positioned in reference to the various architectural elements of the captured interior spaces. The introduction of an investigative object resembles forensic photography in its attempt to document and measure the dimensions and properties of space, which we now see as an illusion since radiation surpasses the physical domain of our perception.24 In this realm of photography, there is no visualization of radioactivity, but rather an awareness or recognition for a hidden reality that exists beyond our senses.






	


&#60;img width="512" height="418" width_o="512" height_o="418" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a772571479c80dba0e1807bbe7e9a0ae6c447c377787e6dc9b8b5d4f7e2e189c/jane--louise-wilson_atomograd-i.jpg" data-mid="179281186" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/512/i/a772571479c80dba0e1807bbe7e9a0ae6c447c377787e6dc9b8b5d4f7e2e189c/jane--louise-wilson_atomograd-i.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1000" height="816" width_o="1000" height_o="816" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4b7fe6ef981a88d4f6e918cd9b927d3ff6560ad0867eb6c1150066c36d9e2f0a/jane--louise-wilson_atomograd-iv.jpg" data-mid="179281187" border="0" data-scale="96" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4b7fe6ef981a88d4f6e918cd9b927d3ff6560ad0867eb6c1150066c36d9e2f0a/jane--louise-wilson_atomograd-iv.jpg" /&#62;

	

“Atomograd I: Nature Abhors a Vacuum” by artists Jane and Louise Wilson.







“Atomograd IV: Nature Abhors a Vacuum” by artists Jane and Louise Wilson.







	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; We lack the ability to directly see the radioactive fallout in the Chernobyl zone, but we can experience and observe its ramifications through biological indicators on humans and other living beings. From the first years after the explosion, USSR reports include 299 hospitalized adults, including 137 of them with radiation sickness. In the Kyiv archives, Kate Brown states that she counted at least 40,000 cases of hospitalized people. In Belarus specifically from the 11,500 cases checked into the hospital, half of them were children, including many that were diagnosed with radiation sickness. Many of them were detected with radioactive iodine measured in a range of 30 to 1,500 rads. In the summer of 1986, there were multiple cases of lethargic children that were reported to have enlarged thyroids, suffering from anemia and presenting infections and various neurological tics.25 Brown shares her conversations with a local medical researcher, Liubiv Yevtushov, who pointed at her charts that revealed increasing birth defects, higher from three to six times in rates than in any other European average. She describes children that she met in surrounding villages that presented the effects of radioactivity through the physical twisting and spiraling limbs in their bodies.26 In her field trip to Chernihiv in northern Ukraine, Brown spoke with the women workers of a wool factory that was particularly contaminated. Radiation appeared to&#38;nbsp;
	&#38;nbsp;them through biological indicators, and particularly when they witnessed bleeding from one of their co-worker’s mouth. This was followed by other reports of nose bleeds, dizziness and loss of consciousness. One day, one of them checked into the hospital completely anemic, requiring blood transfusions. The doses that were measured in two hundred of them were comparable to the ones detected in the “liquidators”, who were the personnel that dealt with the damages in the nuclear plant during the first days of the explosion. The wool factory workers were very much aware of the radioactive contamination of the municipal reservoir that was connected to the city pipes and they knew the victims of leukemia after the explosion. They were even aware of how radioactivity felt in their own bodies, demonstrating the parts that ached the most and comparing that to their extensive knowledge on how Caesium-137 would appear in the flesh, whereas Plutonium-239 and Ruthenium-106 would most likely aggregate in the bone marrow and the joints.27 These women did not need any sort of cartographic imagery or scientific device to visualize and quantify radiation. In fact, it was already present in their bodies, freely revealing itself through physical symptoms and feelings.









&#60;img width="891" height="585" width_o="891" height_o="585" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/12d2a5ea71bdf7958b92de593c1bf08dcc7bc499d18d35e83a3cf89b3a70937a/gerg-ludwig_the-new-safe-confinement.PNG" data-mid="179281188" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/891/i/12d2a5ea71bdf7958b92de593c1bf08dcc7bc499d18d35e83a3cf89b3a70937a/gerg-ludwig_the-new-safe-confinement.PNG" /&#62;


	The New Safe Confinement in Chernobyl, shown under construction in 2013. The $2 billion structure is designed to replace the previous “Sarcophagus” and contain radioactive waste for the next 100 years. Photographed by Gerd Ludwig.




	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; From a bodily sensation of radiation, we are now moving again outside and into the visual spectrum to discuss the series of biological indicators that appeared similarly in other living beings that remain in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. There are multiple scientific methods that have been developed for the observation and representation of radioactivity in living beings, and the artist Cornelia Hesse-Honegger has followed one of the most systematic ones. Throughout her fieldwork and collection of insects, she methodically drew their patterns of evolution around power plants. Following a “truth to nature” paradigm and the development of a taxonomist analysis on the insects allows for clear visualization of the long-term impact of high radioactive levels on populations.28 Brown also narrates her unique experience of the vegetation in the Zone and her journey north of Kyiv at the town of O’Ishany along with the forester Ivan Gusin. There, she witnessed a peculiar pine tree of about 50 years old, which was growing in a disorganized fashion with curling branches and chaotic needles. Located in the center of a bomb crater, it was significantly mutated by the present radioactive energy that was apparently there from an earlier bomb test prior to the Chernobyl disaster. According to the biologists Mousseau and Møller, who have been conducting fieldwork in the Zone for years, supported that few pine trees would end up growing in places with higher than 40 microsieverts radioactivity, and in that case they would usually show marks of mutation. In the particular area of the Red Forest, which happened to receive much of the radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl explosion, its ground remained predominantly brown and
covered with undecomposed pine needles and thick layers of fallen leaves. In her description of the Red Forest, Brown mentions that the smell of these 
 
	places was mostly one of decomposition rather than the flourishing of 
vegetation. The biological indicators, in this case, were in complete accordance to her dosimeter measurements of around 30-35 and leading up to 42 microsieverts per hour. What was surprising, though, was that when she returned back to the road, the radioactive measurement dropped in half. The forest was indeed more radioactive than the artificial asphalt structure of the road, and the scientific explanation for that was that the biological organisms tended to concentrate more radioactive isotopes, making the radiation reading in environments of higher populations of living organisms higher.29&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; In her communication with the biologists Mousseau and Møller, Brown recognizes that for their research, they treat the Chernobyl Zone as a living laboratory. By being present in the field, they have the benefit of the immediacy of the landscape that presents irregular and disorderly concentrations of radioactive material. Through the behavior of the forest and the land and the visible impact of radioactivity in biological systems, they are able to identify territories even outside of the Zone—and where people are permitted to live and farm— which is more radioactive than the excluded and evacuated regions.30 Brown characterizes their work as a “kind of science left to more-than-human landscapes, a science that is dirty, painful and hazardous as much as it is creating and invigorating”. Their “living laboratory” is a collection of remnants of “spent ammunition, heavy
metals, chemical toxins and radioactive waste distribute at a frenetic pace”, which becomes visible on the form and growth of the local plant life and the larger context of the ecosystem.31




	&#60;img width="1950" height="1034" width_o="1950" height_o="1034" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/29192c977ea01ed94ecbc757b77e77129e598bd9e5ebe3e2ecfa13ea75aab11a/kate-brown-1.jpg" data-mid="179281197" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/29192c977ea01ed94ecbc757b77e77129e598bd9e5ebe3e2ecfa13ea75aab11a/kate-brown-1.jpg" /&#62;

&#60;img width="1950" height="1034" width_o="1950" height_o="1034" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/ecadf3510810e412462fea603feb05fa8d89b813bd86e93efc5448517950ab06/kate-brown-2.jpg" data-mid="179281190" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/ecadf3510810e412462fea603feb05fa8d89b813bd86e93efc5448517950ab06/kate-brown-2.jpg" /&#62;
	
Pine trees in Al’many Swamp growing from a bomb crater (top) and shrub-like pine trees along with bare ground in the Red Forest (bottom). Photographed by Kate Brown.




	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Apart from the portion of the radioactive reality that can be perceived through our visual sense, it is also quite interesting to delve into the work of artists and photographers that experimented in their forms of capturing devices and media to unravel the invisibility of radiation itself. In referring back to Bürkner, there seem to be two distinct ways in which photography was used in representing Chernobyl’s landscape, which he defines as the iconographic projection—or the representation of landscape through a symbolic meaning—and the material projection, which involves the use of photography’s capacity to photochemically reveal hidden realities.32 This second case of projection, which we will currently focus on, is a rejection of any traditional or conventional forms of visual representation. The artist Gustav Metzger on the visualization of radioactivity stated that the only method that would completely allow the reflection of nuclear contexts would be the actual physical destruction of the medium that is utilized by radiation itself. By such a method, radioactivity presents itself in the form of exposure, rendering an image that has a grainy and blurred quality. By employing an 
	

epistemic quality of photography, the Brazilian artist Alice Miceli has extensively worked on capturing radioactivity through the use of photochemical material. By attaching large-scale x-ray negatives to trees and houses in the Chernobyl Zone, she was able to retrieve long exposure shots of radioactive emissions. The results of her visual investigations were presented at the Transmediale 2010 in Berlin, placed in backlit lightboxes that showed the images’ abstract and fluid radiation figures. These low-dose radioactivity exposures on the photographic x-ray negatives form abstract representations of the landscape, in comparison to the typical iconographic projections. Although intriguing, Bürkner is concerned with the reliability of these images to accurately represent radioactivity, arguing that the final forms could potentially just be random chemical occurrences. Nevertheless, the medium of the photographic representation of radioactive landscapes is capable of bringing to light invisible forces that escape and transgress our visual spectrum.33

&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;









	&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/b61d973fa62d32620a49a81d6a4b5f64e206a77748307310ce0922bf8cd683f8/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-1.jpg" data-mid="179281191" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/b61d973fa62d32620a49a81d6a4b5f64e206a77748307310ce0922bf8cd683f8/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-1.jpg" /&#62;fragment of a field III - 9.120 μSv

[07.05.09 - 21.07.09]

&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/35daa0c36cd647436004a2892258e99bf77ce91d810b571767c22a486f8ca1d4/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-3.jpg" data-mid="179281193" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/35daa0c36cd647436004a2892258e99bf77ce91d810b571767c22a486f8ca1d4/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-3.jpg" /&#62;fragment of a window I - 2.494 μSv

[21.01.09 - 07.04.09]
&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/96a86480a358203bf46c27812b194ea728b2350d47c551be90762fe4095b6358/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-5.jpg" data-mid="179281195" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/96a86480a358203bf46c27812b194ea728b2350d47c551be90762fe4095b6358/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-5.jpg" /&#62;fragment of a field V - 9.120 μSv

[07.05.09 - 21.07.09]

	&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/0da54b9c0a244e0201333aef4cfc805a3b8442922cd36e4f50b4a96e23ffb5f6/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-2.jpg" data-mid="179281192" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/0da54b9c0a244e0201333aef4cfc805a3b8442922cd36e4f50b4a96e23ffb5f6/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-2.jpg" /&#62;
fragment of the trunk of a tree II - 7.356 μSv

[07.05.09 - 21.07.09]


&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/82424874be3003b7572271ee3ec44bbaccc12f73e73e920cfd816ebf7cc3b427/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-4.jpg" data-mid="179281194" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/82424874be3003b7572271ee3ec44bbaccc12f73e73e920cfd816ebf7cc3b427/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-4.jpg" /&#62;fragment of a field II - 9.120 μSv

[07.05.09 - 21.07.09]

&#60;img width="1160" height="876" width_o="1160" height_o="876" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3eb43d8919a7a40d4d02f14c69a7376a0a7603849accc67fb693b6835525f80a/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-6.jpg" data-mid="179281196" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/3eb43d8919a7a40d4d02f14c69a7376a0a7603849accc67fb693b6835525f80a/alice-miceli_projeto-chernobyl-6.jpg" /&#62;
fragment of a wooden wall IV - 2.956 μSv

[21.01.09 - 07.04.09]

Chernobyl Project: a series of radiographs produced by artist Alice Miceli in 
Chernobyl’s Nuclear Exclusion Zone during 2006-2010.

	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; In examining the capacities of the photographic lens to capture parts of the reality that remain invisible to the naked eye, let’s now focus our attention on one of the earliest artistic documentation of the Chernobyl accident, through the Ukrainian filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko and his “Chernobyl: Chronicle of Difficult Weeks.” Three days after the accident in the Reactor Four in the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant on April 26th, Shevchenko was granted permission to enter the site and fly over to document the decontamination work of the liquidators. After the first recordings of the scene, the filmmaker was disturbed and surprised by the incandescent marks that would randomly appear in his film.34 Upon further investigation and examination of the developed footage, he realized it wasn’t his film that was defective. In fact, he came to the conclusion that the strange image and sound that mysteriously appeared was radioactivity itself, exposed in the form of decaying particles moving through the casing of the camera, rearranging the molecules of his film. Susan Schuppli describes the tiny flares that rapidly ignite the film’s surface as “sparking and crackling”, conjuring “a pyrotechnics of syncopated spectrality.” Particularly in the first scenes and the fly over the site of the exploded Reactor Four, the interplay of the distorted image and sound&#38;nbsp;resemble the Geiger counters and dosimeters with their warnings and alarms. The visual representation of the landscape is superimposed by the interference of radiation, with the viewers becoming witnesses of the 

 
	

otherwise invisible forces and movements of radioactivity through space. According to Schuppli, this audiovisual disruption “collapses the distinction between representation and the real, forcing a rethinking of the ontological nature of media matter as merely a fixed record of events that provides evidence of a moment captured in time”.35&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Years later after the production of the “Chernobyl: Chronicle of Difficult Weeks”, the artists Jane and Louise Wilson met with various surviving members of the film’s crew, who informed them that the camera used for the shooting was so contaminated and radioactive that it was ultimately disposed of somewhere underground. The radiation that distorted the film with audiovisual effects remained in the physical object of the medium, compromising its afterlife and altering its identity to now become a lethal weapon that would need to be immediately removed.36 Throughout the process of recording and filming, Chernobyl’s radiation did not only possess the film and the physical
medium of the camera, but unfortunately the filmmaker himself. On March 29th 1987, Vladimir Shevchenko passed away from extensive exposure to radiation.37








	&#60;img width="1037" height="768" width_o="1037" height_o="768" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/291a4adec3693c45b9417118bd85435d1e3d244969fdbb1721d6dbb8406a4a30/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-2.PNG" data-mid="179281198" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/291a4adec3693c45b9417118bd85435d1e3d244969fdbb1721d6dbb8406a4a30/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-2.PNG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1030" height="762" width_o="1030" height_o="762" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f984f82e041d666e074ba496f639255fedc6cea1fced43eba4c306f9a9a7b505/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-6.PNG" data-mid="179281202" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/f984f82e041d666e074ba496f639255fedc6cea1fced43eba4c306f9a9a7b505/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-6.PNG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1022" height="769" width_o="1022" height_o="769" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5721d1d93598c8495aa75207651f2f921a78958fc69d00b4795bfd1508d10bcb/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-4.PNG" data-mid="179281200" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/5721d1d93598c8495aa75207651f2f921a78958fc69d00b4795bfd1508d10bcb/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-4.PNG" /&#62;
	&#60;img width="1033" height="767" width_o="1033" height_o="767" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/530e6e5c6125fecdc24c9ab6e82b7a621b96b3e79522e4e2bc3a169b10b8fe2a/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-3.PNG" data-mid="179281199" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/530e6e5c6125fecdc24c9ab6e82b7a621b96b3e79522e4e2bc3a169b10b8fe2a/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-3.PNG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1037" height="771" width_o="1037" height_o="771" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/15cd14e300ee61ba2d5fcf8f973c6d230f1220e6eb679e6a2459586da8e34034/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-5.PNG" data-mid="179281201" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/15cd14e300ee61ba2d5fcf8f973c6d230f1220e6eb679e6a2459586da8e34034/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-5.PNG" /&#62;
&#60;img width="1031" height="770" width_o="1031" height_o="770" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3e6b333b871718d3dab581a54fadc97201ed24511d7eed4a1fe7714fd60a61c6/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-7.PNG" data-mid="179281203" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/3e6b333b871718d3dab581a54fadc97201ed24511d7eed4a1fe7714fd60a61c6/chronicle-of-difficult-weeks-7.PNG" /&#62;


Clips from Volodymyr Shevchenko’s “Chernobyl - Chronicle of Difficult Weeks”, produced in 1986. 
The Ukrainian filmmaker documents the first months after the nuclear accident.



	&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; Within the last thirty-four years after Chernobyl’s explosion, there have been various methods that have been developed to visualize and perceive the resultant radioactive territory. The initial attempts from the part of the authorities included using the dosimeters in various areas of the surrounding region and cartographically represent the anomalous dispersal of fallout material in the interior and exterior USSR. The assumed thresholds of risk and safety of radiation for the human bodies became the base for the delineation of the legal borders of the Exclusion Zone, a territory evacuated from all people. Throughout the years, photographic projects have attempted to capture the complex relationship between the “flourishing” vegetation and wildlife and the radioactive remnants that will haunt the region for thousands of years. In this paradoxical reality captured in photography, radioactivity remains an invisible force, but with significant physical ramifications. Various biological indicators in humans and other living beings show its resultant distortions and mutations. From the visual presentation of the impact on the exterior skin of the victim, we are moving to the literal embodiment of radioactivity through the wool factory workers’ aches, the children’s enlarged thyroids and the radiation sickness, as well as also the irregular growth of pine trees and decomposition and decay of the Red Forest. From the visible impact of radioactivity on the landscape, photography 
	was also used more experimentally to expose some of the hidden layers through various 
photochemical techniques, such as Alice Miceli’s x-ray photographs of various artifacts in the Zone. The accidental appearance of radiation in Shevshenko’s film provides a visualization not only of the environmental conditions of the Reactor Four, but also of the radiation absorbed by the medium itself and, ultimately, even the lethal radioactive dosage for the filmmaker’s body.
&#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; &#38;nbsp; In the examination of all the various methods of visualization and interpretation of the radioactive landscape of Chernobyl, there is no single medium that can successfully capture the full extent of the current condition. Through the composition of textual stories and audiovisual elements, we are closer to the perception and conception of the complexity and invisibility of the radioactive landscape. In the emergence of the geologic epoch of the Anthropocene, our actions are agents of the planet will be followed by unpredictability, uncertainty and invisibility. Along with our technological and scientific evolution, it is essential to develop means of representing such phenomena along with their resultant byproduct emerging landscapes.













REFERENCES


	1 Pravin P. Parekh et al., “Radioactivity in Trinitite Six Decades Later,” Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 85, no. 1 (January 2006): 103–120, 104.

2 Gerd Ludwig and Meg Ryan Heery, “Ripple Effect,” American Photomag, May-June 2014, 33.

3 Gabrielle Decamous, “Nuclear Activities and Modern Catastrophes: Art Faces the Radioactive Waves,” Leonardo 44, no. 2 (2011): 124–132, 130.

4 Daniel Bürkner, “The Chernobyl Landscape and the Aesthetics of Invisibility,” Photography and Culture 7, no. 1 (March 2014): 21–39, 21.

5 Gabrielle Decamous, 128.

6 Daniel Bürkner, 22.

7 Kate Brown, “Marie Curie’s Fingerprint: Nuclear Spelunking in the Chernobyl Zone,” in Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene, by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing et al. (University of Minnesota Press, 2017), G33.

8 Philip R. Pryde, Environmental Management in the Soviet Union (Cambridge [Eng.] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1991), 45.

9 Richard North, “Living with Catastrophe,” Independent, December 10, 1995, https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/living-with-catastrophe-1524915.html.

10 “Forsmark: How Sweden Alerted the World about the Danger of Chernobyl Disaster,” European Parliament, May 15, 2014, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/headlines/society/20140514STO47018/forsmark-how-sweden-alerted-the-world-about-the-danger-of-chernobyl-disaster.

11 Nicola Shulman, “Nuclear Holiday,” New Criterion 38, no. 1 (2019): 18–22, 20.

12 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” Current Anthropology 60, no. S20 (August 1, 2019): S198–208, S199.

13 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S198.

14 Gerd Ludwig and Meg Ryan Heery, “Ripple Effect,” American Photomag, June 2014, 30.

15 Nicola Shulman, 19.

16 Daniel Bürkner, 22-23.

17 Daniel Bürkner, 24.

18 Gabrielle Decamous, 130.

19 Daniel Bürkner, 26.

20 Daniel Bürkner, 24.

21 Nicola Shulman, 20.

22 Daniel Bürkner, 29.

23 Daniel Bürkner, 30.

24 Susan Schuppli, “Material Malfeasance: Trace Evidence of Violence in Three Image-Acts,” Photoworks, no. 17 (2011): 28–33, 30.

25 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S198.

26 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S200.

27 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S199.
28 Gabrielle Decamous, 130.

29 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S207.

30 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S205.

31 Kate Brown, “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes,” S208.

32 Daniel Bürkner, 22.

33 Daniel Bürkner, 35.

34 Susan Schuppli, 28.

35 Susan Schuppli, 30.

36 Susan Schuppli, 30.

37 Reuters, “A Soviet Film Maker at Chernobyl in ’86 Is Dead of Radiation,” The New York Times, May 30, 1987, sec. World.
	
BIBLIOGRAPHY


	Barad, Karen. “No Small Matter: Mushroom Clouds, Ecologies of Nothingness, and Strange Topologies of Spacetimemattering.” In Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene, by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Nils Bubandt, Elaine Gan, and Heather Anne Swanson. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.

Blackford, James. “Red Skies: Soviet Science Fiction.” Sight and Sound 21, no. 7 (2011): 45–48.

Brown, Kate. “Learning to Read the Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Literacy in the More-than-Human Landscapes.” Current Anthropology 60, no. S20 (August 1, 2019): S198–208.

———. “Marie Curie’s Fingerprint: Nuclear Spelunking in the Chernobyl Zone.” In Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene, by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Nils Bubandt, Elaine Gan, and Heather Anne Swanson. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.

———. Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium Disasters. Cary, UNITED STATES: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2013.

Bürkner, Daniel. “The Chernobyl Landscape and the Aesthetics of Invisibility.” Photography and Culture 7, no. 1 (March 2014): 21–39.

Decamous, Gabrielle. “Nuclear Activities and Modern Catastrophes: Art Faces the Radioactive Waves.” Leonardo 44, no. 2 (2011): 124–132.

European Parliament. “Forsmark: How Sweden Alerted the World about the Danger of Chernobyl Disaster,” May 15, 2014. https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/headlines/society/20140514STO47018/forsmark-how-sweden-alerted-the-world-about-the-danger-of-chernobyl-disaster.

Glikson, Andrew Yoram. The Plutocene: Blueprints for a Post-Anthropocene Greenhouse Earth. 1st ed. 2017. Modern Approaches in Solid Earth Sciences, 13. Cham: Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2017.

Ludwig, Gerg, and Meg Ryan Heery. “Ripple Effect.” American Photomag, June 2014.

North, Richard. “Living with Catastrophe.” Independent, December 10, 1995. https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/living-with-catastrophe-1524915.html.

Parekh, Pravin P., Thomas M. Semkow, Miguel A. Torres, Douglas K. Haines, Joseph M. Cooper, Peter M. Rosenberg, and Michael E. Kitto. “Radioactivity in Trinitite Six Decades Later.” Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 85, no. 1 (January 2006): 103–20.

Pryde, Philip R. Environmental Management in the Soviet Union. Cambridge [Eng.] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1991.

Reuters. “A Soviet Film Maker at Chernobyl in ’86 Is Dead of Radiation.” The New York Times, May 30, 1987, sec. World. https://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/30/world/a-soviet-film-maker-at-chernobyl-in-86-is-dead-of-radiation.html.
Schuppli, Susan. “Material Malfeasance: Trace Evidence of Violence in Three Image-Acts.” Photoworks, no. 17 (2011): 28–33.

Shulman, Nicola. “Nuclear Holiday.” New Criterion 38, no. 1 (2019): 18–22.

Tsing, Anna Lowenhaupt, Nils Bubandt, Elaine Gan, and Heather Anne Swanson. Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.
	

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