HOUSES OF DARKNESS
Interactive website and exhibition addressing perpetrator perspectives in contemporary Nazi camp memorials
![](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5085a2f1e4b022321f5f68bc/2b538b01-4350-4a2a-ae76-f3a59dcc64a9/Westerbork_Oving-Architecten_dezeen_1568_3.jpg)
Westerbork Commanders House. Photo: Susan Schuls
Houses of Darkness is an exhibition spanning 3 locations with an interactive website that helps unpack the contested histories of Europe, initiating discussions and deepening thinking around what makes a perpetrator.
As part of this evocative project, Stand + Stare have created a bespoke website with an online conversational tool that helps visitors to delve deeper into their thoughts and feelings about perpetrator heritage and how the stories surrounding perpetrators are told, preserved or erased. To help explore these challenging questions, we’ve included a suite of creative activities that stimulate people in their own everyday contexts to consider how the misdeeds of the past might still be relevant today.
The Houses of Darkness website also provides an entry point into the interactive artworks of 3 artist teams that have been working directly in the sites of 3 Holocaust Memorial camps. Their work can be experienced on location at each of the Memorial camp sites and online via the Houses of Darkness website.
More about the project
Houses of Darkness (2020-2023) is a culture cooperation project co-funded by Creative Europe and a joint initiative of four partners in Norway, Germany, and the Netherlands: Bergen-Belsen Memorial (DE), Camp Westerbork Memorial Centre (NL), Falstad Centre (NO), and the creative producer company Paradox (NL).
Addressing perpetrator perspectives at a Nazi camp memorial site is a contested task. After WW2, the extensive system of camps was transformed to a trans-European network of memorials dedicated to remembering the victims of the crimes. Perpetrator spaces, former camp headquarters and commander houses, imply a challenge to memorials’ teaching and curatorial practices. A need to address the memories of these buildings motivated the project. In a time when war is again at Europe’s doorstep, it is crucial not to keep perpetrator heritage in the dark, risking populist voices claiming their ownership to it. Instead of refusing to take perpetrators’ perspectives, Houses of Darkness uses memorial sites as arenas for enlarging them and debating them together. In exploring what it meant to be responsible for war crimes in the past, we also discuss how our choices and actions in the present – as individuals and societies – shape the world we are living in.
The website including the Let’s Discuss feature has been conceived by Stand + Stare, with web development by Fieldwork and brand design by Kummer + Herman.
“All of the Let’s Discuss conversations made me think about the subject in more depth... Especially the questions that considered family as perpetrators... The more personal the questions the more it made me think.”
Funded by
Creative Europe
Provincie Drenthe
Dutch Culture
Gerhardt en Mieke Meijer educatiefonds
Fritt Ord Foundation
Mondriaan Fonds
Collaborators
Memorial Camps -
Falstadsenteret (The Falstad Centre, Norway)
Herinneringscentrum Kamp Westerbork (The Netherlands)
Gedenkstätte Bergen-Belsen (Germany)
Debs Hoy - creative producer
Paradox - creative producing company
Fieldwork - web development
Kummer & Herman - branding
Latest Projects
Interactive projection wall for Wonderlab: The Bramall Gallery, at The National Railway Museum
A multi-sensory dining experience designed for older adults with barriers to accessing cultural activities
Creative workshops inviting people to explore their hopes and dreams for a speculative new city
Installation celebrating LGBTQ+ heritage embedded in the rich collections at RAMM, Exeter
Interactive website and exhibition addressing perpetrator perspectives in contemporary Nazi camp memorials
Designing new diary formats that help promote positive mental health and wellbeing
Explore the Barbican Centre archive through oral histories and projected animations
Touring Sound Booth presenting a collection of women’s contemporary stories of activism
Interactive table that plays a selection of stories relating to the Partition of India