Montserrat College of Art
Graphic Design Senior Seminar

instructor: Maya Drozdz
Spring 06

STUDENTS
Liya Hoshi | Allison Lamb | Lisa Lombardini | Timothy Lynch | Adel Shakir | Denis Skarep

Denis Skarep

Dirt and Shadow

There, on geographically small ambiance of Bosnia and Herzegovina, where during the centuries egoistic tendencies of different civilizations clashed with each other; Greek - Hellenistic and Roman - Etruscan; where the border between the Eastern and the Western Roman Empire went through; where the Islam and the Christianity forever stayed mixed in a cuddle - there have been left tens of thousands of Stecaks. Stecaks are tombstone monuments of those who between eleventh and fifteenth century never conformed to any of the empires and their influences, but stayed true to themselves.

There, on this space intersection of civilizations, cults, and religions, they found the way to conciliate the unconciliatable in interlocking and impregnation of things that strived to destroy everything that was not identical. Time has shown that in this region human thought was always more bright that the sword. People died from sword, while they lived from and with the thought, because the sword couldn't resolve the differences. There, where every aspect of existence always needed the coexistence, human spirit and not sword, has left the lasting visions and philosophy of life. History makes note of those who ravage, but remembers and value only those who create.

For my first semester project [Fall 2005], I made a selection of epitaphs that are inscribed on Stecaks, translated them into English, and made a book of epitaphs dated eleventh through thirteenth century. For this semester, I'm making another volume [fourteenth and fifteenth century epitaphs], and combining the two into one book. I'm also working on some other forms of presentation for this project [web site and possibly poster].

past work: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6
resume

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