Shrine of the Torchbearer

An enshrined relic lies dormant within a storied cavern, guarded by clerics of the վիշապ (Dragon) clan. Maro and their best friend Hro stumble into the shrine while playing about the market, activating an ancient prophecy that will change their society forever.

~See below for narrative story text~

All photos by Clare Gatto; chamber descriptions by exhibition curator Isabella Nimmo. Exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit November 2024 - February 2025.

The Antechamber

Individuals making holy pilgrimage to the sacred shrine would use this space to spiritually cleanse and prepare themselves for entry. The four panels that greet visitors depict a manifestation of spells meant to ward off evil and protect the sanctity of this space. Further inside the gallery, visitors encounter the “tonir,” a ceremonial fire pit that hosts an eternal flame. In Azadistan, various types of magical fire are venerated as avenues for engaging with divinity and life force. 

The concept of the “tonir,” the Armenian word for “underground clay oven,” derives from the Zoroastrian tradition of symbolizing the sun entering the earth. Blending with indigenous Armenian sun worship, Zoroastrianism was the predominant religion in Armenia prior to the country’s Christianization and has been present in the region since the 5th Century BC. In Zoroastrian doctrine, atar and aban (fire and water) are agents of ritual purity, and the fire temple is a traditional place of worship.

Cavern Chamber

The main cavern chamber: a space guarded by ominous floating clerics, members of Azadistan’s ruling class, charged with protecting the shrine’s sacred artifacts and offer visiting pilgrims insight into the chamber’s centuries’ old inscriptions.

At the center of the chamber lies the “tome,” a religious text that presents a transliteration of the wall inscription into the contemporary Azadistani language. The tome details the lore surrounding the collapse of digital society, as well as the history and rituals of this sacred space. 

The area behind the wall is inaccessible to everyday pilgrims. Its inscriptions contain an additional future prophecy that does not align with the worldview and dominant status of the clerics and the clan from which they belong.

The Shrine

Herein lies the cavern’s most sacred artifact: the enshrined “relic of the Torchbearer,” a mysterious crystalline object that has hovered in place for over 500 years. It is in reverence to the relic that people make the pilgrimage to the holy site; to pay their devotion and respect to an artifact that has fundamentally shaped their lives. 

The wall inscriptions surrounding the shrine detail the story of how the relic brought fire magic to the 12 clans of Azadistan. Each clan has access to a different element of fire magic, which offers a range of powers from minor conveniences to major transformations.

Mounds of pungent spice, glimmers of glazed sweets and rows of textile stripes blur together as Maro and Hro race past crowded market stalls in the bazaar at the city’s edge. Maro takes a sharp left at the last stall, heading deep into a dusty clearing. They stop dead in their tracks at the edge of a daunting cavern mouth adorned with tassels and protective inscriptions. Hro appears beside them, takes a look at Maro–their mouth still hanging open in awe, and walks straight into the cavern, turning back to give Maro a sly smile.

Maro follows, blinking to adjust to the dim cavern interior, lit only with candles kept aflame by various kinds of magic. The sound of crackling flame beckons them through the second entryway as ethereal amulets of intricate lines and letters materialize around them as if being drawn in midair. Reaching the end of this chamber, Maro walks up to Hro’s side while he solemnly kneels at the altar of this shrine’s eternal flame. Hro’s grief—unusually abundant for his age—manifests into a constellation of tiny crystals and enters the flame with a calm gesture.

With their respects paid, they enter the next room: a hall of ancient carven stone lined with once-vibrant weathered tiles, floors beaten by the passing soles of countless travelers. Torchbearer clerics of the dragon clan hover nearby, faces obscured, emitting ominous auras of flame as if to impose upon visitors the repercussions of improper behavior.

The inscriptions in the cavern are chiseled in a script seen only on the walls of the oldest temples and in ethereal magical incantations. A tome lies open against the main wall offering a translation into modern Azadalez. The shrine’s walls detail the events of the Collapse and the hollow years which followed, promising the arrival of twelve spirit beings to shape the era to come.

Naturally, young Maro and Hro skip the history lesson and move straight toward the glowing blue shrine beyond the next archway. An imposing, glittering, faceted crystalline form floats above a well-appointed altar, lit with many candles of offering and prayer. Hro reads aloud from a tiny plaque atop the altar: “has floated, unmoving for 500 years.” Hro moves back into the other room and stares down the clerics, trying to find out what lies under their veils. 

Maro becomes enrapt by the object, but their trance is soon broken by a tiny glimmer, a sudden blinking light on the far left edge of the object. They notice a small passage to the left and begin to follow the path, unnoticed by the clerics now busy with Hro’s curiosity. The path leads to a wall inscribed with a single sentence, where no translation into modern script is offered. Maro is struck with a sense of curiosity and unease. Without any control, threads of obsidian magic flow around Maro’s eyes, giving them a glimpse of the true meaning behind these words written centuries ago:

… then neither man nor woman shall quell the rage of the divine siblings–for only through emerald flames wielding the darkest threads, will the medium emerge as righteous guide beyond the red flames of corruption…

The images of text suddenly glitch out of Maro’s perception as Hro slaps them on the shoulder.  “We can’t be late for dinner at your grandmother’s, not again!!”

With no time to process what any of that even meant, Maro rushes to follow Hro out of the cavern filled with the anxiety of their grandmother’s looming admonitions.

The images above were created using Midjourney, an AI imaging program, using images of the artist’s work to generate illustrations to accompany the narrative text in the exhibition program.

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