Last Folio

“No foreign sky protected me, no stranger's wing shielded my face.
I stand as witness to the common lot, survivor of that time, that place.”

Anna Akhmatova

About

March 2006 Eastern Slovakia

Serendipity lead the photographer Yuri Dojc, his producer Katya Krausova and their documentary film team to an abandoned Jewish school in Eastern Slovakia, where time had stood still since the day in 1942 when all those attending it were deported to the concentration camps… 

…the school books were there still, essay notebooks with corrections, school reports, birth certificates, school accounts, even sugar still in the kitchen cupboard… all decaying on dusty shelves, the final witnesses to a once thriving culture.

These abandoned, disintegrating books are treated by Yuri Dojc like the survivors that they each are - every one captured as a portrait, preserved in their final beauty, pictures speaking a thousand words. 

Now, years later, his own search, which started with portraits of survivors following his father's death, is transformed into a remarkable photographic narrative.

Amongst these many hundreds of books and fragments photographed by Yuri, one stands out especially - one which miraculously found its way from a dusty pile to its rightful heir - a book once owned by Yuri’s grandfather Jakab.  

Last Folio charts a personal journey in cultural memory – a reflection on the universal loss,  as a part of the European remembrance.

Last Folio now travels as an art installation combining an exhibition of selected photographs a documentary film ,and a book in a number of countries on both sides of the Atlantic.

Twelve of the images are now part of the permanent collection of the Library of Congress in Washington.

In 2015 Last Folio will be part of the worldwide commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II and the exhibition will be seen in the United Nations in New York, in the National Library of Germany in Berlin, the Mark Rothko Museum in Latvia in the New Museum of Tolerance in Moscow and the Art Gallery of Tufts University in the USA.

Special Thanks To

The Rothschild Foundation Europe

Lowy Mitchell Foundation, UK

Ministry of Culture, Slovak republic

Epson, Canada

Rita & John Grunwald Foundation, USA

Fern Schad & Alfred Moses, USA

The May & Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, USA

Mr John Studzinski

Mr Henry Kallan

The Cambridge Jewish association

Pentagram, Daniel Weil

The Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, UK

News Corporation - Media Sponsor

Anonymous donors

The Team

  • Artist

    Photographer, artist and witness, Yuri Dojc’s expansive practice encompasses many kinds of looking. His multi-lens trajectory has pivoted from an established commercial photography practice to his current gaze as an artful observer of the vestiges of history’s most vulnerable.

    In 1968, as Russian tanks were rolling into his native Czechoslovakia, the young student summering in London became, abruptly, “refugee.” And soon, that status shifted again, to immigrant, as Dojc made his way to Canada. In the decades since, the photographer has made Toronto his home, and the world both his subject and his host.

    Dojc is best known for his observational approach to the past, with its alloy of subjectivities, empathy, and intimacy. Since the late 1990s, he has been documenting Slovakia's last living Holocaust survivors and the country’s abandoned synagogues, schools, and cemeteries for a series called Last Folio. An international success, this show travels extensively, with major exhibitions in Rome, Berlin, Moscow, New York, Sao Paulo among others. A feature length documentary by filmmaker Katya Krausova, a Producer of the Last Folio project, premiered in 2016 in Toronto and is now being screened world-wide.

    In Dojc’s most recent series, North is Freedom: The Legacy of the Underground Railroad as in so much of his work, the photographer illustrates the power of art to convey a narrative that continues to touch us here, now, and into the future.

  • Producer

    Katya Krausova is a British independent television producer/director. She is the co-founder of the leading UK Arts and Drama independent film and television production company PORTOBELLO PICTURES, which won the 1997 ACADEMY AWARD for KOLYA, the Best Foreign Language Film. Portobello Media continues to provide media consultancy as well as the production of a variety of projects. Ms Krausova is based in London, UK and is fluent in English, Slovak, Czech, Russian, German and Spanish.

    Czechoslovak born, Ms Krausova arrived in Britain following the 1968 Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia and she completed her undergraduate studies in economics and politics at the London School of Economics and post–graduate studies at St. Antony’s College, Oxford.

    She started her television career at the BBC in 1976 where she researched and produced many current affairs documentaries including a number of award winning Panorama investigations. Topics ranged from co!existence with the Soviet Union, issues affecting Germany in the seventies and eighties, attempts to achieve an Islamic nuclear bomb to President Carter’s handling of the US/Iran hostage crisis.

    After the BBC she continued her career as an independent producer and director, primarily in the field of music and arts. Her documentaries and performance programmes have been co-produced with many national broadcasters worldwide. Amongst the many internationally renowned artists she has repeatedly worked with are SIR GEORG SOLTI, JACQUELINE DU PRE, ANDRAS SCHIFF and DANIEL BARENBOIM, KIRI TE KANAWA, Barbican 5th Birthday concert with MURRAY PERAHIA, a LIVE GALA CONCERT FROM PRAGUE CASTLE FOR PRINCE CHARLES and PRESIDENT HAVEL’s Prague Heritage Foundation, Beethoven sonatas with Claudio Arrau for his 80th birthday, a documentary on VIKTORIA MULLOVA’s first year out of the Soviet Union!Welcome to the West, Andras Schiff in Budapest, and with the Royal Ballet choreographer DAVID BINTLEY a number of his original pieces! Gallantries, Hobson’s Choice as well as Still Life at Penguin Cafe. In 1994 she co-produced a major feature film of VLADIMIR VOINOVICH’S “LIFE AND EXTRAORDINARY ADVENTURES OF PRIVATE IVAN CHONKIN” directed by the Oscar winning Czech director Jiri Menzel with an all Russian cast. The film was awarded the Gold Medal at the 1994 Venice Film Festival.

    Since the political changes in Eastern Europe, Ms Krausova has been involved in advising as well as project management in the film and television industries of the CZECHEPUBLIC, SLOVAKIA, HUNGARY, POLAND, BULGARIA, ROMANIA and the UKRAINE and setting up a soap opera in KAZAKSTAN in association with the KNOW HOW FUND, a British government’s technical assistance programme for the countries of the former Soviet bloc.

    She has initiated and organised the EAST WEST PRODUCERS SEMINAR, which has since its establishment in 1990, completed a number of training activities in the field of business of film, television, media, entertainment law, copyright protection, sponsorship, and marketing for the arts. Over three hundred young professionals from all over Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union participated in the annual workshops and Masterclasses, as well as twenty five Orchestra managers who learned “survival methods” in the absence of State subsidies. Other Know How Fund supported activities in this field included consultancies to Czech Broadcasting Council, Management reports for Polish, Slovak and Bulgarian and Czech Television, Business plan for the privatization of the BARRANDOV FILM STUDIOS.

    Since 2002, Ms Krausova has been active as a producer in the field of international debates as a founding member and producer of INTELLIGENCE SQUARED, the now well established debating forum based in London. With the NEXUS Institute in Holland organizing a series of intellectual summits, amongst them a series on both sides of the Atlantic entitled “EUROPEA BEAUTIFUL IDEA” which coincided with the Dutch Presidency of the EU. producing international academic workshops and debates in the field of economics, politics, international relations and neuro–economics, sponsored by the US based GRUTER INSTITUTE Foundation in collaboration with Queen Mary College, London University and the NYU Business School, which took place on both sides of the Atlantic in 2007.

    Since 2005, she has been working on a major documentary project about the remains of Jewish culture in Slovakia, following the work of the celebrated Canadian photographer Yuri Dojc. A series of exhibitions entitled LAST FOLIO, showcasing this project has already been traveling in Europe and the UK since 2008 and is planned to be further exhibited in major museums and institutions in Moscow, New York, Brussels, Berlin and Amsterdam, amongst other cities.

Exhibitions

2019

Museo Del Canal, Panama City, Panama

Ricordi Futuri: Memoriale della Shoah, Milano, Italy

2018 

Memoriale della Shoah di Milano, Milano, Italy

Galerie Karsten Greve, Cologne, Germany

Austrian Cultural Forum, Bratislava, Slovakia

Synagoga Lucenec, Lucenec, Slovakia

Palazzo Sant’Elia, Palermo, Italy

2017

Galerie Karsten Greve,Paris

Art Gallery of Hamilton, Canada

Goethe University , Frankfurt, Germany

2016

Woodrow Wilson Memorial Hall,  Washington DC

Unibes Cultural,Sao Paulo, Brazil

Van Leer Institute ,Jerusalem, Israel

2015

Museum of Tolerance, Moscow

Tufts University Art Gallery, Boston

United Nations, New York

Mark Rothko Art Center, Daugavpils, Latvia

Staatsbibliothek, National Library of Germany, Berlin

2014

Akademie der bildenden Kunste, Vienna, Austria,  February - March

Slovakia, Various cities, April - September

2013

Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma, Rome, Italy, October - January

Galéria Jozefa Kollára Banská Stiavnica, November- January

Kosice, European City of Culture, Slovakia, June - August

2011

Grunwald Gallery of Art, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, September - October

Pierre Berge Foundation, Brussels,  Belgium, May

European Commission, Brussels, Belgium, April

Museum of Jewish Heritage New York, March - August

2009

Cambridge University, Gonville and Caius Library, November - December

2008

Slovak National Museum, Slovakia