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Bombhead and Bombs Away: when remembering is an art

Powerful reminders of our nuclear and military past echo in an uncertain present, with a show in Vancouver and new book pulling no punches
atom bomb head
Bombhead by Bruce Conner: a visceral reminder of the atom bomb
Bruce Conner Bombhead, 1989/2002 pigment on RC photo paper, acrylic Private Collection © Estate of Bruce Conner/SODRAC (2018)

Bombhead, Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada, until 17 June; Bombs Away: Militarization, conservation, and ecological restoration by David G. Havlick, University of Chicago Press

NUCLEAR apocalypse, a threat that only a few years ago seemed to have passed into history, is back at the forefront of our minds. Suddenly, the Vancouver Art Gallery’s latest exhibition, Bombhead, is more timely than curator John O’Brian could have imagined when he began planning it two years ago.

O’Brian, a former art historian at the University of British Columbia in Canada, has curated an eclectic mixture of nuclear-themed art, drawn largely from the gallery’s permanent stores and his own personal collection, to remind us of our shared nuclear history.

The exhibition space is divided into four areas: The Bomb, Fear, Document and Protest. Not surprisingly, the most wrenching works turn up in Fear. Here Nancy Spero’s five paintings, particularly Bomb and Victims, stand out for their hallucinatory depictions of mushroom clouds filigreed with human figures vomiting blood and bleeding from wounds. Betty Goodwin’s Rooted Like a Wedge offers nothing overtly nuclear, but her smudges of grey and tan, abstract at first glance, gradually reveal tortured human figures that build a powerful sense of pain and foreboding.

Other works are more cerebral. Andrea Pinheiro’s Bomb Book assembles the names of all 2450 nuclear detonations that have taken place since 1945, one per page. The resulting 12-volume set vividly illustrates the scale of nuclear testing. A collection of pamphlets from the 1960s shows bomb shelters and nuclear survival tips, and even, chillingly, includes one called Fun with the Atom. Then there is a series of images from Vancouver photographer Robert Keziere that captures the origins of Greenpeace, which started life in Vancouver as a protest against the US nuclear test on Amchitka Island, Alaska, in 1971.

The centrepiece of the show, however, is Bruce Conner’s film Crossroads. Wordlessly, it shows a 1946 US nuclear test explosion at Bikini Atoll and its mushroom cloud over and over and over again, in slow motion, from different angles until the viewer feels battered and overwhelmed.

The cloud lingers long after the film ends, an after-image reinforced by the inclusion of Conner’s other major work, Bombhead, a portrait of a military officer with a mushroom cloud where his head should be. That remembrance is an important counterpoint to the complacency that set in after the end of the cold war. “The people I know have forgotten to be afraid of the arms race,” says O’Brian.

“If we forget these sites were once military, we may foster a blithe acceptance of them as wildlife havens”

It is vital to remember other kinds of military legacies, too, as David Havlick’s book, Bombs Away, powerfully demonstrates. Havlick, a geographer at the University of Colorado, explores the conversion of old military sites into wildlife refuges.

He visits decommissioned military bases in the US, the demilitarised zone between North and South Korea, and the “Iron Curtain Trail”, a park running the length of the old Iron Curtain that divided eastern and western Europe.

It is easy to see the conversions as ecological success stories – and in many ways they are. But Havlick is adamant that this coat of green paint mustn’t obscure the sites’ uncomfortable histories and legacies, in many cases of unexploded ammunition, toxic chemicals and human displacement.

If we forget what these sites once were, he says, we may foster a “blithe public acceptance of these places as havens for wildlife without examining or holding accountable the actions and institutions that produced such damaged landscapes”. Like O’Brian, Havlick’s aim is to nettle us out of an easy complacency about our military history and future. Sadly we may not need that nettling now.

This article appeared in print under the headline “The art of remembering”

Topics: Art / War / Weapons