4.8.2020
Moments of History / The Time Corridor
Multimedia exhibition in the corridor between historical and new building of the National Museum in Prague.
The corridor is a raw concrete shell connecting places, transferring information, and organizing people. A cast of free underground volume in between the city’s infrastructure. We have inserted three bodies with a length of 56 meters into it, which creates space for time transmission.
Wenceslas Square. Key public space in the Czech Republic. The venue of the most important events. The crossroads of the history of our nation. We present our history on the footprint of one century and the story of the architectural development of the two 720 meters long facades of the square.
To be sufficiently authentic, the most modern audio-visual technologies had to be combined with respectable technical parameters. The 56 meters long corridor is covered on both sides with a continuous projection with an area of almost 270 m2, projected by a total of 38 laser projectors with ultra-short mirror lenses
Moments of the birth of a big city
The original Gothic square with Renaissance and Baroque houses was transformed into a generous boulevard during the 19th and 20th centuries. It became the center of modern Prague. The houses are witnesses of this transformation, reflecting the ambitions and style of their time.
Changes of the 60 buildings of today’s square are processed in a time-lapse animation. One second of animation is one real year. In the years 1860–1939, 66 changes occurred, in the years 1939–2019 only fourteen.
In 1875, trees were planted. Subsequently, however, they were cut down and then replanted. The gas candelabra were replaced by the Křižík lamp on the eve of the electrification. These were later replaced again, this time by neon facades. The darkness of the war bombing turned into the illumination of communist banners and then into the current smog of the LED night. While in the 1930s the windows of residential houses shone with life, they remain dark today and only shop windows are lighted up.
In the prologue of the film, the visitor can see what was in the area of Wenceslas Square during the Paleozoic seas or at the very beginning of the universe.
Moments of 20th – century history
In this part, we bring the visitor from the turn of the millennium to the euphoria of the revolution of 1989. Then he finds himself in the middle of emptied rituals of normalization. Another turning point is the occupation of 1968. In the 1950s, the public space is full of celebrations of communist totalitarianism. Shortly before the onset of communism, people stand in the square and forcefully express loyalty under Nazi rule. Everything is preceded by sincere faith in the Czechoslovak Republic after 1918.
The materials filmed on Wenceslas Square are presented as museum exhibits.
Each of the topics is represented by eight situations that are repeated across all events. They are divided into two categories: action and reaction. The action consists of shots of the symbol, driving forces, and situations. The reaction contains shots of individuals and the crowd.
With its resolution, this project represents the largest continuous projection in Europe, but at the same time, it is exceptional on a global scale.