multi-media installation (2025)

with composition by Jerome Kavanagh Poutama

#650 Echoes of the Un/Known, 2025, 15’ (single channel and three-channel version)
#1967 [lost original], 2025, 60x300cm print
#2048 Terra Unexposed, 2025, 5’35’’ 16mm, looped

In Antarctic Archives, Janis Polar examines how Antarctica is constructed as a last frontier of «raw nature» — and deliberately breaks with this image . He questions how the human «discovery» of Antarctica has been staged as a triumph in imperial narratives and what consequences this has for ecosystems and geopolitical power dynamics. Which perspectives have been, and continue to be, excluded? Through the montage of photographic fragments and technical devices, Janis Polar creates an ambivalent archive that develops its own (visual) language while exploring its inherent blind spots.

Antarctic Archives experiments with entanglements in past, present, and future narratives, asking: By whom, how, and for whom is the Antarctic still being measured? The work focuses on the tensions between the various functions of Antarctica — as a research object, as a political space, as a site for wild speculation, as a resource, or as a habitat for the non-human (microorganisms, animals, the landscape itself) and the human.

The exhibition comprises three chapters, each reflecting on different processes of rendering the Antarctic visible and the interlinked technologization: from satellite imagery to radar scans all the way to the ice core laboratory . Janis Polar tells stories that oscillate between science and fiction, illustrating how humans and nations do not merely measure “nature” neutrally, but also manipulate and instrumentalize it — just as the artist’s own gaze and imagery do.

The exhibition combines Janis Polar’s own film material, scientific imagery, digital renderings, and archival materials. For the chapter ‘#650 Echoes of the Un/Known’ he collaborated with Grammy-award winning Māori Composer and Taonga Puoro practitioner Jerome Kavanagh Poutama. His compositions are based on sounds and recordings that he creates using traditional instruments and techniques. In dialogue with the cinematic images, a hybrid acoustic experience emerges that gives Antarctica its own ‘voice.

// Amelie Schüle (Curator Photoforum Pasquart) & Janis Polar

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