
Half Life Chornobyl
Volker Kreidler
Zitadelle Spandau
Am Juliusturm 64, Berlin, Berlin 13599
Fri-Wed 10am-5pm, Thu 1pm-8pm
Admission
Free Admission
About
On April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant suffered what remains the worst-case accident in the history of civilian nuclear energy. Nearly ten years later, in 1995, the German Hygiene Museum Dresden commissioned photographer Volker Kreidler to document the consequences of the catastrophe for people, places, and nature. In 2015, the photographer returned to the exclusion zone to capture, through his camera, nature’s gradual reclamation of the area in the near-total absence of human activity. In 2025, Volker Kreidler travelled once again to Kyiv; the resulting photographs bear highly contemporary witness to the political realities of present-day Ukraine. At the centre of the 2025 works is the resilience of the people of Kyiv and the exclusion zone, particularly under the conditions imposed by Russia’s war of aggression. The exhibition _Half Life Chornobyl_ at Bastion Kronprinz, Zitadelle Spandau, presents this long-term project in a comprehensive form: as a manifesto visualising the limits of control within our highly technologised world. From the permanent invisible threat of radiation and systemic corruption to escalation through acts of war, Kreidler’s images demonstrate that the risks associated with nuclear power are never static, but assume unpredictable dimensions, especially in times of crisis.