epoch game Images of Ukraine, When Things Began to Fall Apart


When future historians seek to understand life in the twilight years and aftermath of the Soviet Union, from the late 1960s to the close of the 20th century, they will study the photographs of Boris Mikhailov.
An artist who had to work surreptitiously in his youth, Mikhailov since the collapse of the Soviet regime has enjoyed worldwide acclaim, including exhibitions of his pictures at the Museum of Modern Art and Tate Modern. Like Nikolai Gogol, another Russian-speaking Ukrainian, Mikhailov depicts hardship and pretense with a guffaw. “Isn’t it awful?” elides seamlessly into “Isn’t it funny?” — all of it tinged with a melancholy awareness that the joke may be on him.
Mikhailov has homes in his native Kharkiv and in Berlin, although he has not been to Ukraine since the Russian invasion. Vigorous at 86, he included a new video composed of still photographs along with a sampling from some of his best-known photo series, in “Boris Mikhailov: Refracted Times,” at Marian Goodman Gallery through Feb. 22. He likes to explore a subject thoroughly by presenting a sequence of images, frequently juxtaposed in pairs to highlight recurring themes and revealing incongruities.
Mikhailov could not exhibit his work publicly until 1990, when the Soviet Union was on the brink of dissolution. He initially built a reputation in Kharkiv by superimposing photographic slides and projecting them in private apartments. Once he was no longer confined by state censors,sayaph casino he printed the images as montages that he called “Yesterday’s Sandwich.”
In the exhibition at Marian Goodman, a video reproduces the original projections, with one image quickly succeeded by the next, to the accompaniment of a Pink Floyd soundtrack. Very often, he placed a shot of a nude woman (forbidden under Soviet morality standards) on top of a drab street scene or an idealized landscape, infusing the dreary reality or banal fantasy of Soviet life with a suppressed eroticism.
ImageBoris Mikhailov’s new show, “Refracted Times,” includes two video works — one from the late 1960s and ‘70s titled “Yesterday’s Sandwich.”Credit...via Boris Mikhailov and Marian Goodman Gallery; Photo by Alex YudzonWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.
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Mr. Trump likened the influx to an “invasion” at his rally in North Carolina. “We are going to totally stop this invasion,” he said. “This invasion is destroying the fabric of our country.” He also claimed, falsely, “Every job in this country produced over the last two and a half years has gone to illegal aliens — every job.”
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