Background information
The four-volumes-photo-book set 'Erde, Feuer, Wind, Wasser '(Earth, Fire, Wind, Water) is the result of a long-term documentary project. The publication raises questions about cultural and collective heritage, taking the viewer on a (visual) journey through the story of 20th- and 21st-century Europe – a story of war, migration and political upheaval, a story that has had a profound impact on unnumbered families.
Content and extended description, using the text by Ulrich Rüter for LFI
In each of the four photo volumes of the photo book set, 'Earth, Fire, Wind, Water' by Damian Michal HEINISCH – symbolically anchored in the four elements and the four seasons, emphasising the cycle of life – the narrative focuses on various generations of my family over the last 75 years. It begins with my grandfather’s diary (a historical fragment from his time as a prisoner of war in Ukraine), moves on to the family’s emigration from Poland to West Germany in the 1970s and the world in which the Polish relatives live today, before exploring his relationship with my widowed father in Germany and my own search for identity in Norway, his adopted home. Each of the four books is accompanied by texts by the media and art scholar Sophie-Charlotte Opitz, who critically examines photography’s mechanisms of action and places the project by Damian HEINISCH in an overall cultural-historical context. With the four volumes, she also negotiates the various workings and dynamics of cultures of memory that operate across national borders and generations. Interviews conducted by Kristian Skylstad complement the publication, which also portrays a precarious universal and current history in a personal way.
"This time, our Book of the Month is comprised of no less than four volumes in a lavish slipcase box presentation. The cover of each individual book comes in a different colour, with a simple typographical design; the photographer's work is only revealed once the reader opens up the large-format volumes. Anyone who then expects to see pleasing landscape pictures, revolving around the elements of earth, fire, wind and water, will soon realise that Heinisch's imagery is actually very different: the title conceals the results of a long-term documentary project; one which centres around and reflects upon the story of the photographer's family.
It is a complex project: in each volume the photographer focuses on family members from different generations.
In 'Erde' (Earth) the protagonist is the photographer's grandfather, who died in a Soviet forced-labour camp in Ukraine at the end of the Second World War. He had kept a diary from February 16 to September 10, 1945: each of its sets of double pages is filled with tiny script, and is reproduced in its original size on the right-hand page; while the text appears in readable print on the left-hand page. Reading through the entries represents a depressing immersion into the dramatic situation the author, Walter Heinisch, was living through – the diary leads up to his death on October 5, 1945. His grandson, Damian Michał HEINISCH, has now cleverly inserted his own explorations of his grandfather's fate in this photo book: the pages where the diary has been reproduced also unfold, revealing motifs – photographed using an autochrome process – that were taken in 2014, when the photographer travelled through Ukraine, in the footsteps of his grandfather. Past and present interweave. The fact that the current war in Ukraine began shortly after the photographer's trip represents another link to contemporary history. The accompanying texts provide the necessary information about the family and historical contexts: in each of the books there is an essay by media and art scholar Sophie-Charlotte Opitz, as well as an interview with the photographer. Thus opens up an exciting process, involving the functioning and dynamics of memory and culture, which transcends national borders and generations.
The other three volumes offer further chapters in the photographer's family story. 'Feuer' (Fire) talks about how the family emigrated from Poland to West Germany in the seventies. 'Wind' deals with the photographer's widowed father in Germany, with motifs photographed in black and white. In 'Wasser' (Water) the photographer completes the four-volume compendium by questioning his own identity in his adopted home country of Norway.
Each family has its own language, codes, and behavioural patterns. Even so, fundamental comparisons can be detected. Consequently, this project reveals itself as a multi-layered, exciting tetralogy that delivers a challenging interpretation of an individual life and family story; while, at the same time, working with the most diverse forms of photographic expression. The photographer has a broad repertoire: he works with a variety of techniques and cameras, analogue and digital, in colour and black and white.
It is precisely this very personal approach that allows us to derive general considerations concerning perception and memory. The project is neither easy to digest, nor simple to browse through; yet, it is the necessity for the viewer and reader to give the books time and attention that reveals the project's convincing and emotional power. The balance between effort and content has been achieved, with great success." (© Ulrich Rüter, in: LFI. Book of the Month from 23.11.2021)
Additional information
The photo book set 'Earth, Fire, Wind, Water' by Damian Michal HEINISCH is published as a limited and signed edition of 600 copies. The four high-quality hardcovers are united in a linen slipcase. The texts in German and English are by Walter Heinisch, Sophie-Charlotte Opitz, Kristian Skylstad; Andreas Rød SKILHAGEN is responsible for the very coherent book design.