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Curatorial Statement

CURATORIAL STATEMENT

by Helena Nikonole

The Golden Horn has long been an active force in history—its natural harbor shaping commerce, empire, and survival. It sheltered ships, fortified shipyards, and secured Istanbul’s role as a strategic hub. This year’s Golden Horn Light Festival invites us to reconsider this entanglement of landscape and human ambition, now at a moment when humanity itself has become a geological force.

In the Anthropocene, the balance of agency has shifted: humans alter coastlines, extract rare-earth minerals for digital infrastructures, and accelerate climate change. Once a site of historical continuity, the Golden Horn now reflects new vulnerabilities—rising seas, resource depletion, and geopolitical tensions.

This festival explores these interconnections. Works highlighting the Golden Horn’s historical role as a protective force intersect with those confronting today’s ecological fragility. The materiality of technology is central: the same rare-earth minerals that power digital projections link Istanbul’s luminous present to distant landscapes of extraction

Through light, digital art, and site-specific interventions, the festival transforms the Golden Horn into a space for reflection. As we reshape the planet, the Earth responds—this dialogue has never been more urgent.

This festival explores these layers of interconnection. Works that trace the historical function of the Golden Horn as a protective force resonate with pieces that confront today’s ecological vulnerabilities — rising temperatures, vanishing coastlines, and the geopolitics of digital infrastructure. The materiality of technology is central: rare-earth minerals extracted from distant lands fuel the very screens and projectors that illuminate the festival, linking Istanbul’s luminous present to the landscapes of extraction and exploitation worldwide.

Through light, digital art, and site-specific interventions, the festival transforms the Golden Horn into a stage for reflection. It invites us to re-see landscapes as co-authors of history and to acknowledge that, as much as we shape the Earth, it will ultimately respond. In a time of environmental crisis and technological acceleration, this dialogue is more urgent than ever.