boris mikhailov is a photographer who i
am looking at because of the way he portrays people, he essentially pays people
to do what he wants them to do, and then photographs them, i personally don't
feel this is ethical. i however am looking at people identity, so i thought it
would be worth a look
http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1138
Ukrainian-born
Boris Mikhailov is one of the leading photographers from the former Soviet
Union. For over 30 years, he has explored the position of the individual within
the historical mechanisms of public ideology, touching on such subjects as
Ukraine under Soviet rule, the living conditions in post-communist Eastern
Europe, and the fallen ideals of the Soviet Union. Although deeply rooted in a
historical context, Mikhailov’s work also incorporates profoundly engaging and
personal narratives of humor, lust, vulnerability, aging, and death.
This exhibition is the
first in-depth presentation of Mikhailov’s seminal Case History series
(1997–98) in an American museum. This body of work explores the deeply
troubling circumstances of people who have been left homeless by the collapse
of the Soviet Union. Set against the bleak backdrop of the industrial city of
Kharkov, Mikhailov’s life-size color photographs document the oppression,
devastating poverty, and everyday reality of a disenfranchised community living
on the margins of Russia’s new economic regime. Mikhailov recalls of his
experience returning to Kharkov some years after the collapse of communism,
“Devastation had stopped. The city had acquired an almost modern European
centre. Much had been restored. Life became more beautiful and active,
outwardly (with a lot of foreign advertisements)—simply a shiny wrapper. But I
was shocked by the big number of homeless (before they had not been there). The
rich and the homeless—the new classes of a new society—this was, as we had been
taught, one of the features of capitalism.” One of the most haunting documents
of post-Soviet urban conditions, Mikhailov’s pictures capture this new reality
with poetry, clarity, and grit.
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