3. THE RIVER

Chapter 3: The River – My Personal Journey Through Pain and Hope

Performance: Lydia Klammer / Music: Theo Jörgensmann

This chapter moves me the most, for it was shaped by a place that confronted me, inescapably, with Germany’s past.

Originally, the river was a flowing stream of emergency blankets—a symbol of humanity caught in a cycle, forever threatened by inhumanity. But as I stepped into the former Stasi detention center, the river transformed. It became a Via Dolorosa—a path of suffering.

THE RIVER stands as a tribute to all those who suffered under systems of oppression—those who were tortured, broken, murdered. It remains, a silent witness to both past and present. Yet for me, it is also a symbol of hope: Humanity can be destroyed, but it will always rise again.

The film: THE RIVER  https://youtu.be/D2OtQJAhtus

Why This Exhibition is Personal

I cannot speak of this work without revealing my own connection to it. Many of the images and scenes were born from personal experience. They are shaped by places I have visited, stories that have touched me, moments that have burned themselves into my consciousness.

Many times, as I worked on this exhibition, I was overwhelmed by the weight of memory—the echoes of suffering, the depths of human resilience. I thought of all those, past and present, who are silenced, stripped of their freedom, erased from history.

This exhibition is my response to the question: How do we confront destruction and division?

At a time when authoritarian forces are once again growing louder, when human dignity is once again being questioned, I refuse to remain silent.

Art, for me, is also resistance.

It gives us a voice when words fail in the face of rising brutality.

THE RIVER reminds us that humanity is not a given. It is a choice—one we must make, again and again. Through our actions, through our art, through our defiance.

The question is not whether we can do something.
The question is—will we?

April/2025