Cape Times

‘Lost Souls’ stepping out for Syria

- STAFF WRITER

ARTIST Anthony Lane will be embarking on a walkabout in the city while talking about his most recent work, the “Lost Souls” project.

It’s comprised of an installati­on and a photograph­ic record of washed-up shoes collected from the shores of a Greek island.

This is to highlight the urgency of the Syrian crisis.

Lane has collected more than 300 shoes over a period of two years.

Each belonged to a human being, perhaps a child, perhaps someone who once owned their own business, perhaps a pregnant woman.

“Lost Souls” visually and symbolical­ly portrays the grim reality of those victims who lost more than their shoes, but their homes and often their lives. These tragic traces of the footwear of people lost in a political storm, are markers of the individual cost of a civil war.

This project exists because Lane says instead of turning away from the evidence that kept washing up on the Skopelos doorstep, he saw an opportunit­y to raise awareness of those who were victims of a global crisis.

The delicate process has involved curator Clare Patrick, who photograph­ed the shoes, capturing them as portraitur­es together with an installati­on that has taken residence at Eclectica Contempora­ry in Cape Town.

The exhibition at Eclectica Contempora­ry, 69 Burg Street, runs until October 28. The walkabout takes place on Saturday at 11am from the Eclectica gallery.

 ??  ?? THE ‘Lost Souls’ project comprises an installati­on and a photograph­ic record of washed-up shoes collected from the shores of a Greek island. This project began because instead of turning away from the evidence that kept washing up on the island of Skopelos’ beaches, Anthony Lane saw an opportunit­y to raise awareness of Syrians who are victims of a global crisis.
THE ‘Lost Souls’ project comprises an installati­on and a photograph­ic record of washed-up shoes collected from the shores of a Greek island. This project began because instead of turning away from the evidence that kept washing up on the island of Skopelos’ beaches, Anthony Lane saw an opportunit­y to raise awareness of Syrians who are victims of a global crisis.

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