Concrete relicts. Wartime dinosaurs sunbathing on the Atlantic coast.
While traveling the Atlantic Coast Daniela Finke discovered this ambiguous place of memory in New Aquitaine, Soulac-sur-Mer region. More than 70 years after the end of the war, these monstrosities have been exposed to the forces of nature and erosion and slipped from the edge of the dune into the Atlantic. The defensive wall has broken and the former borderline dissolved. The bunkers are half-hidden in the fine sand, lapped by the waves of the sea. Once Hitler's megalomaniac Atlantic project, they have now become projection surfaces for visions of pop culture. A memorial — and solitaire of poetry.