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Afterwar: Veterans
from a World in Conflict
by Lori Grinker
Lori Grinker's Afterwar: Veterans from a World in Conflict is a fifteen-year
project documenting the physical and psychological wounds of frontline
war veterans from World War I to the war in Iraq. With support from magazine
assignments and grants, Lori began seeking out veterans’ stories
around the world — from Eritrea to El Salvador, from Pakistan to
Russia — a journey that eventually took her to over thirty countries:
“There I met the men, women, and children who walked the fields
and survived, often with damaged bodies and scarred lives, who emerged
with new ideologies, conflicts, questions, and emotions, with the special
knowledge of the killer, the hero, and the defeated. In the aftermath
of war, one culture mirrored another, it made no difference if one had
been in a ‘bad’ war or a ‘good’ war, justified
or unjustified, on the winning or losing side.” The artist’s
challenge was to make photographs that would transcend the personal tragedy
of these individuals to become something universally symbolic and understood.
An exhibition of large scale color photographs is currently showing at
Nailya Alexander Gallery in NYC, and is accompanied by the artist’s
recent book of the same title, which includes her interviews with the
veterans. Afterwar illuminates our culture of war and is especially relevant
amidst the ongoing carnage in Afghanistan, Iraq, Chechnya, Columbia, Congo,
Kashmir, the Middle East, and Sudan. The exhibition encourages viewers
to reflect upon the complex social, economic, and political conditions
of conflict. As Lori puts it: “We watch the reports from the front
on television as if it were a spectator sport. But they suffer for us.
They are our sacrificial lambs. Through this project, I hope their images
and words will serve as a powerful reminder of the wastefulness of war.”
Nailya Alexander Gallery
24 W 57 Street, #501, NYC
 
Afterwar: Veterans from a World in Conflict
by Lori Grinker
With Robert Pledge, Chris Hedges and Jacques Menasche
Hardcover, 224 pages
11.3 x 8.5 inches
ISBN: 978-0970576873
de.MO, 2005
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