“Life despite here” is an on-going series on the plethora of urban social issues plaguing the city of Beirut, depicting its perpetual state of disrepair and stagnation in the shadow of the Syrian crisis and a national political vacuum.
Life despite here
In her ongoing project “Life despite here” Ieva Saudargaitė depicts Beirut’s perpetual state of disrepair and stagnation in the shadow of the Syrian crisis and a national political vacuum.
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- 16 December 2014
- Beirut
The series began in October 2013, when local and international media coverage was greatly focused on sectarian tensions and violence within and across the Lebanese border. Headlines aside, life in the city was carrying on as usual. Yet, with more “important” and “urgent” problems to deal with, the government has turned a blind eye to the intra-urban social and civic issues. Left to fester and multiply, their impact is much more closely felt by the local population than the “greater” troubles used as an excuse to disregard them. Negligence and corruption date back to the start of the civil war in 1975 and remain rampant. The perpetual absence of positive action has created a built environment that embodies these qualities and a population that is civically apathetic and disengaged. Using the built form both as stage and protagonist, the series tells a story of a rapidly paced and largely uncontrolled construction/demolition frenzy, of wasted potential and hazardous living conditions, and of people, present, but detached.
Based in Beirut, Ieva Saudargaitė is a Lithuanian-Lebanese architect/photographer who grew up between Vilnius, Abu Dhabi and Beirut. Passionate about forms, analogies and stories untold, her work focuses on the built environment and Man’s impact on a world he calls His.