PRINCETON, N.J. — Julian Chehirian was born in Brooklyn, the child of artists who fled Bulgaria’s political repression at the end of the 1980s, about a year before the fall of the Berlin Wall. After being granted asylum at the Traiskirchen refugee camp outside Vienna, they waited a year and a half for safe passage to the U.S. They never expected to return.
When the 60th Annual Venice Biennale opened on April 20, the exhibition pavilion representing Bulgaria displayed the work of Chehirian, a graduate student in the history of science and the Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Humanities (IHUM), and his two collaborators, Lilia Topouzova and Krasimira Butseva. Chehirian’s father died in 2011; his mother, who returned to live in Sofia, Bulgaria, in 2018, attended the opening of the Biennale.
Chehirian’s multimedia installation, ”Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989),” on view through November 24, will take visitors inside a chapter of Bulgarian history that has been largely absent from textbooks, museums and public debate — the forced labor and political violence in the Bulgarian gulag under Communist rule from post-WWII through the late 1980s before the fall of the Soviet Union.
Princeton’s Chika Okeke-Agulu, the Robert Schirmer Professor of Art and Archaeology and African American Studies, also participated in the Biennale, as a member of the exhibition’s International Jury. Okeke-Agulu is director of Princeton’s Program in African Studies and of the University’s Africa World Initiative.
Artistic Attention as ‘a Form of Care’
“Neighbours” presents memories of the gulag, conveyed in a series of three furnished rooms that viewers walk through: a living room, a bedroom and a kitchen. Multimedia elements include found objects, video projections and audio recordings that intentionally fade in and out.