Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – The “Murs” photo exhibit at the Pont de la Machine in the centre of Geneva has been closed after attacks on the large-format photos, graffiti and slashing, in early January. The open-air exhibit had already been attacked in November shortly after it opened. A guard was posted, but the new attacks make it too costly to keep it open, say organizers.
The exhibit was organized to commemorate the fall, 20 years ago, of the Berlin Wall, and featured some of the world’s best photojournalists’ images of walls that divide, around the world.
Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – The Pont de la Machine in the centre of Geneva, not far from the Mont Blanc bridge, will for the next three months offer visitors the irony of a bridge as a showcase for walls that divide humanity. “Murs”, an extraordinary exhibit of large-scale photos of barriers taken by some of the world’s top photographers, opened Monday 9 November in Geneva. The show continues to 31 January 2010. The collection of images of life on both sides of walls that were erected for political reasons are striking, particularly at night or in rainy weather when their backlighting makes them stand out from the stream of people crossing the bridge.
Pedestrians entering the footbridge from the left bank of the Rhone first see the building of the Berlin wall: the exhibit’s opening was timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of its fall. Monday, before the official opening, saw a typical crowd of people crossing the bridge, some on their cell phones with thoughts elsewhere and others with their eyes on the ground, concentrating on getting from point A to point B. All were obliged to confront the artwork because the 12 lightboxes that hold 24 large format images (200cm wide) printed on tarmac are laid out in such a way that people have to zigzag across the bridge.























