Originally part of a multi-media installation at the Everhart Museum in Scranton, Pennsylvania, King Anthracite documents the lives, work, and early deaths of Lithuanian immigrants (including Kybartas’ ancestors) who mined the Pennsylvania coalfields at the turn of century. Oral histories of miners detail their impressions of the United States and the hardships they encountered, including black lung disease and other occupational hazards that turned wives into widows and children into orphans. Modern images of trucks hauling toxic waste to a landfill offer a symbolic view of history as a continual exploitation of people and the land.
King Anthracite: The Rock Man
Stashu Kybartas
1990 00:29:39 United StatesEnglishColorStereo4:3VideoDescription
About Stashu Kybartas
In describing his work, Stashu Kybartas has said, “I have chosen to work in video and performance because these are storytelling media. I want to tell my stories and the stories of others because I believe that through telling one’s story, one can be healed.” Born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, Kybartas’ work confounds traditional documentary by interweaving memory, reflection, historical and personal documents, interviews, and historical research to flesh out the past and provide history with a human face.