On his most recent trip to Greenland, photographer Ciril Jazbec witnessed something magical—a photographic experience that made his “hairs stand on end.”
He was there working on his project, On Thin Ice, a chapter in a larger body of work chronicling the effects of climate change on communities in low-lying regions.
While in Uummannaq, (which is surprisingly the eleventh-largest town in Greenland, even with a population of about 1,200 people) Jazbec came across Children’s Home Uummannaq. Speaking with the director, he learned that one of the ways the facility helps children is by “involving them in the traditional way of life, connecting them with hunters and fishermen”—the sort of cultural traditions often affected by changing weather patterns and globalization, and right in the crux of Jazbec’s goal of putting a human face on climate change.
One night, Children’s Home arranged to take the kids on a special outing—“We decided to head to the ice—to the frozen-over sea—to project Inuk, a Greenlandic language film, onto an iceberg,” Ciril says. The film is especially relevant because of its cast of “nonprofessional Inuit actors”—seal hunters and youth from a local children’s home—and its narrative highlighting the tension between tradition and modernity present in contemporary Greenland.
"In a visual sense, it was one of the craziest things I’ve ever experienced.
It’s hard for me to describe how much it inspired me and how touched I was.
Just coming onto the ice with snowmobiles was immensely exciting.
Before the projector was set up, the children did a couple of dances and sang some Greenlandic songs. I only watched the first 10 minutes of the movie and then I decided to use the tripod to discreetly shoot multi-second exposure photos, trying to capture the images illuminated by the projection.
I remember a moment where I laid down on the ice, I was watching the stars and the northern lights, and I thought to myself, ‘this is a very special moment."
Ciril Jazebec
Ciril Jazebec
Children’s Home Uummannaq projects the Greenlandic language film, ‘Inuk,’ onto an iceberg.
The film, directed by Mike Magidson, tells the story of a young urban boy,
who is put in a foster home in the north
where his guardian sends him to the bear hunter, Ikuma,
Nielsine Lovstrom
from the Children’s Home Uummannaq
cradles a Greenlandic puppy to keep it warm
while she watches the film.
Jensigne Lovstrom
from Children’s Home Uummannaq
watches the movie Inuk.
Joas Korneliussen, a local hunter,
watches the movie Inuk.
He helped organize and transport everyone
to watch the film on the ice using a snow mobile.
Screening a film onto an iceberg sounds logistically complicated . . . and cold.
Jazbec says the preparation took a few days:
“We did some recon on the ice to find a suitable iceberg and prepared a DVD player and sound system powered by a gasoline-fueled generator.
The seats were just sleds covered with deer and musk ox skin.”
And as for the temperature?
“The weather was provided by some higher power . . . It was perfect, about –4 degrees Fahrenheit, with no wind and the most beautiful starry night sky sprayed with northern lights.”
Ron Davis Alvarez and Sofia Hernandez Mejia
are musicians and music teachers from Venezuela.
They visited Children’s Home for few months this year to teach the kids music with El Sistema,
a music program that aims to create great musicians
while dramatically changing the life trajectory the kids it works with.
As children caught between the old ways and the new sat transfixed by the film, their faces illuminated with light from the digital projector, Jazbec felt he was able to record images that “don’t just tell the story of a moment, but also capture a larger story about modern Greenland—remote towns caught up in globalization, about young people leaving for the cities.”
Bertrand Lozay,
French documentary filmmaker and artist from Uummannaq Polar Institute
turns off the projector after the film screening.
He conducts research on the disappearance of Greenland’s traditional hunters
and put on workshops with children from Children’s Home.
“I’m not interested in merely taking pretty pictures of communities undergoing momentous changes, I’m looking to create a long-term life’s work that stands as a document of a time and a people who lived in this time, reminding us of how things used to be and cautioning us that our planet is delicate and fragile.”
Ciril Jazbec
Learn more about the film Inuk on its site:
http://www.inuk-film.com/
Ciril Jazbec’s project, On Thin Ice, will be on view in an exhibition at the Les Rencontres Arles Photographie from July 7-September 21, 2014.
See more of Jazbec’s work on his website:
http://www.ciriljazbec.com/personal/on-thin-ice
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