Liquid Land by Rena Effendi

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Rena Effendi LIQUID LAND

Rena Effendi

LIQUID LAND


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liquid land on an endangered species of people

Rena Effendi

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Liquid Land is a collective portrait of communities living dangerously among the oil spills and industrial ruin of the Absheron peninsula. Pushed to the edges of city and society, they inhabit makeshift homes, oil fields and abandoned factories; their numbers grow, with new children born daily. Many are refugees of war - rural populations that lost everything and fled to the city to be safe and to find work. Living in these inhuman conditions for two decades now, they no longer have their village expanse but still breed livestock among the metal waste of factories and hang their laundry on oilrigs. The air they breathe, the water they drink, the playgrounds for their children are all contaminated and hostile. Yet life goes on in this dodgy urban concoction - people decorate their crumbling homes with peacock feathers; a boy plays his drum on a heap of construction waste; an elderly couple plants potatoes in an oil field; a woman waits to deliver her child in her cardboard home. Land is liquid underneath these people’s homes - their present survival tenuous, their children’s future uncertain. Pinned into this book, the people in my portraits are damaged yet survive, not perfect like the 26

butterflies next to them, but alive.

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Liquid Land is a collective portrait of communities living dangerously among the oil spills and industrial ruin of the Absheron peninsula. Pushed to the edges of city and society, they inhabit makeshift homes, oil fields and abandoned factories; their numbers grow, with new children born daily. Many are refugees of war - rural populations that lost everything and fled to the city to be safe and to find work. Living in these inhuman conditions for two decades now, they no longer have their village expanse but still breed livestock among the metal waste of factories and hang their laundry on oilrigs. The air they breathe, the water they drink, the playgrounds for their children are all contaminated and hostile. Yet life goes on in this dodgy urban concoction - people decorate their crumbling homes with peacock feathers; a boy plays his drum on a heap of construction waste; an elderly couple plants potatoes in an oil field; a woman waits to deliver her child in her cardboard home. Land is liquid underneath these people’s homes - their present survival tenuous, their children’s future uncertain. Pinned into this book, the people in my portraits are damaged yet survive, not perfect like the 26

butterflies next to them, but alive.

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