Screenshot of the Sunken Villages website |
On July 1, 1958 a controlled explosion tore open a cofferdam near Cornwall (ON) and four days later an area that had been home to 7,500 people disappeared under the waves of Lake St. Lawrence, part of the newly created St. Lawrence Seaway. On the Canadian side, twelve communities, some dating back to the 1700s, were affected. Some of their remaining buildings can still be seen trough the blue waters of Lake St. Lawrence – high up from an airplane.
Screenshot of the Sunken Villages website |
For the first time, this exhibition combines Louis Helbig’s aerial photographs of what remains deep beneath the St. Lawrence with recorded first-hand accounts from 27 people affected by the inundation.
Furthermore, the Sunken Villages project has a new website sunkenvillages.ca. It brings Helbig's aerial photos of the villages lying in the St Lawrence River together with portraits and the voices (transcripts, audio & video) of 27 people who lost their communities. The new website reflects the exhibition: large format prints, audio of individual voices & stories piped into the gallery, and portraits of all the interviewees.
Screenshot of the Sunken Villages website, Interviews |
Facts:
www.sunkenvillages.ca
Sunken Villages
Brockville: St. Lawrence College, Marianne van Silfhout Gallery
September 13 to November 2, 2013