Olya Ivanova. Kich-gorodok

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Kich-gorodok Olya Ivanova



Kich-gorodok Olya Ivanova



I shot a small town in the northern part of Russia named Kich-Gorodok. It is ordinary town with ordinary life, like hundreds of similar towns across the country. I went through villages around it which were almost depopulated and shot portraits of people still living there. At the same time my companion Anna Petrova, the philologist and anthropologist, retake the photos from the family archives of these people for her own work. I used her images for this book with a sense of gratitude. I tried to shoot in the same style as village professional photographers who were invited to make pictures of weddings, funerals, kids and feasts from the beginning of XX century. I wanted to continue local tradition of posed portraits ‘in the best dress with serious face’. It helps me to connect all these people in their feeling of being Russian, in common amosphere of irrationality and some kind of surrealism, in such a Russian combination of absurd and beauty, sadness and kitsch, family and history, life and death. Olya Ivanova


Documentary Romanticism Documentary romanticism is almost an oxymoron, like blue egg yolk. But it does exist. It appeared not long ago. This is the new photography. ‘Documentary’ because it is often related to an event, locally defined and ethnographically justified. ‘Romanticism’ because here we are speaking of a cold beauty that is detached (not originating from within), of half-tones and wavelengths, of rhythm, anguish, melancholy, semitransparency, anorexia, something ‘pale and interesting’. But there is no hint of satire, irony, jest, jingoism, serious research or statistics and strata — an encyclopaedia, in short — as happened in the previous century of the Enlightenment, and the era of magnum reportage in classical times. Yes, it does have its own infantilism and juvenility, its cockiness and lack of inhibition mixed fifty-fifty with hysterics and autism. Shots of five-storey apartment blocks at twilight, fish slit apart, the photographer’s own bruises, scars left by beatings, children’s playgrounds in the freezing cold, teenagers at holiday camps, St. Petersburg courtyards, empty parking lots, wintry Donbass, Moscow Zoo or truly delightful Vologda babushkas and little girls. They all take photographs in medium format, rarely large format, extending the semi-tones and arranging the image so you can examine it fixedly for a long time. There is none of Bresson’s ‘decisive moment’ here, just frozen film and laidback music, their own impressions, like keeping a journal that fetishizes personal opinions and ideas.


This is also a generational, almost a hipster phenomenon. With their love of everything vintage, antiques and bowsand-arrows (documentary romantics frequently photograph themselves, as if afraid of forgetting and losing, of dissolving altogether in the harmony of celestial spheres). They are particularly fond of ‘cool trash’ — again, poetics associated with the ruins of romanticism. Both the significance and plasticity of ‘docrom’ photo series are defined by location: the year, city, season and weather — there are no specific or pre-arranged images here: everything happens incidentally, on the spur of the moment. Or doesn’t happen, in which case the photographer packs up his camera and departs with the explanation ‘Not my thing, sorry, I’m off’. This documentary romanticism now exists in the West: there too they photograph horses at night, old cars by the roadside, beaten-up girlfriends and disturbing suspense shots of every kind. In Russia such photography is printed in Afisha or Bolshoi Gorod and exhibited by FotoDepartament. In my opinion all this put together precisely expresses the celebrated ‘spirit of our time’, the ‘vision of the next generation’ that has moved away from Soviet heroics and news media or studio commissions. (Studio photography equates with cloying, slick sentimentality, the triviality of glossy glamour magazines.) That’s why I like ‘docrom’ so much. Anna Petrova



Nina Alexeevna Lobanova. Ploskovo


Valentina. Ploskovo


Nastya. Kich-gorodok



Slava and Alexey. Kich-gorodok


House inside. Zakharovo


Sergey. Zakharovo


Oleg. Nizhniy Enangsk


Unknown girl. Kich-gorodok


Forest. Kich-gorodok


Cafe. Kich-gorodok



Red Corner. Kich-gorodok


Nina Timofeevna. Zakharovo


Seedling. Ploskovo


Alexandra, Valentina and Maxim. Kurilovo


Sewing. Kich-gorodok


Seni (inner porch). Kurilovo


Maxim. Kurilovo


Oleg. Kich-gorodok


House of culture. Kurilovo



Vladimir and his daughter. Kich-gorodok


Anna Petrova’s expeditionary archives






























House of culture. Nizhniy Enangsk



Ksenia and Galya. Kich-gorodok


Kitchen. Kich-gorodok


Galya. Ploskovo



Antonina, Tatiana and Nastya. Ploskovo


Twins. Zakharovo


Vova. Kich-gorodok


Football. Kich-gorodok


Road. Kich-gorodok


Nastya. Kich-gorodok


Kichmenga river. Kich-gorodok


Galya and Sveta. Ploskovo


Lera. Kich-gorodok


Angela and Veronica. Kurilovo


Church. Ploskovo



Dasha. Nizhniy Enangsk


Seni (inner porch). Kich-gorodok



Special thanks to folklore department of Moscow State University and personally to Sergey Alpatov, Vasily Kovpik and Anna Petrova. 2010



Olya Ivanova. Kich-gorodok Design Title Studio 2012




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