Selected Press

ArtReview, Deimantas Narkevičius’s Points of Instability, Thomas McMullan, March 2024

GalleriesNow, The Weekender – Must-See Exhibitions, Deimantas Narkevičius: The Fifer, 26 January 2024

e-flux, Deimantas Narkevičius’s “The Fifer”, Michael Kurtz, 2 February 2024

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Maureen Paley is pleased to present the third solo exhibition in the gallery by Deimantas Narkevičius, The Fifer. His work examines the relationship between personal memories and political histories, particularly those of the post-Soviet era of his native country Lithuania. Employing documentary footage, voice-overs, interviews, re-enactments, and found photographs, his works submit historical events to the narrative structures of storytelling and cinema.

The Fifer
exhibition view
Maureen Paley, London
2024

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This exhibition centres around a project titled The Fifer, 2019, which materialises several states of sound across different media and is composed of a holographic screen, a bronze cast of a flute, two photographs, and a musical soundtrack. On the holographic screen a bird flutters in and out of vision, accompanied by the audio of a flute mimicking the melodies of birdsong. Alongside this, the internal cavities of a flute are cast in bronze, rendering the acoustic qualities of this instrument as a weighted thread of metal. The two photographs that complete the work depict a soldier playing the flute whilst facing away from a window. The first print is an archival image and the second is a digital reconstruction that imagines this scene from an exterior perspective.

Akmenys Po Du (5)
enlarged double exposure Polaroid prints on paper
35 x 51.5 cm - 13 3/4 x 20 1/4 in
2023

Akmenys Po Du (9)
enlarged double exposure Polaroid prints on paper
35 x 51.5 cm - 13 3/4 x 20 1/4 in
2023

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The most recent work on display in the exhibition is a 2023 series of enlarged Polaroid prints that depict mythological stones in Lithuania. For centuries, people have questioned how these have appeared in great plains or dense forests within the national landscape. The stones feature in pagan legends and many act as altars and sanctuaries. These Polaroid prints meditate on how land is ascribed significance, in keeping with Narkevicius’ broader interrogation of how geopolitical hierarchies are determined.

The Fifer
exhibition view
Maureen Paley, London
2024

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The exhibition also includes his earlier film, Europa 54° 54′ – 25° 19′, from 1997. This work shows Narkevičius navigating a journey from his former home in Vilnius to the Lithuanian countryside, whereupon he locates a plaque marking the geographic centre of Europe. In the voiceover, he announces that after years of travelling around the continent he has finally found out that the centre of Europe actually lies just outside the Lithuanian capital. Europa 54° 54′ – 25° 19′ challenges coherent definitions of the centre and periphery, opposing the Cold War tensions that had oscillated the centre of Europe between cities such as Brussels, Berlin, and Moscow. This geographic centre is itself disputed; 54° 54′ – 25° 19′ were coordinates determined by the Parisian Institut Géographique National in 1989, a figure contested by towns in both Belarus and Hungary who also have monuments declaring themselves the midpoint of the continent. Yet Europa 54° 54′ – 25° 19′ serves less as an appraisal of this location than a questioning of its importance.

The Fifer
(detail of installation)
HD colour video with stereo sound (looped), holographic screen, archival black and white photograph (image: Central State Archive of Lithuania), digitally produced black and white photograph, bronze cast object
2019

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The Fifer
(detail of installation)
HD colour video with stereo sound (looped), holographic screen, archival black and white photograph (image: Central State Archive of Lithuania), digitally produced black and white photograph, bronze cast object
2019

Missing caption

The Fifer
exhibition view
Maureen Paley, London
2024

Missing caption
Missing caption