Boris Mikhailov (photographer)
Ukrainian photographer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ukrainian photographer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boris Andreyevich Mikhailov or Borys Andriyovych Mykhailov (Ukrainian: Бори́с Андрі́йович Миха́йлов; born 25 August 1938) is a Ukrainian photographer.[1][2][3] He has been awarded the Hasselblad Award[4] and the Citibank Private Bank Photography Prize.[5]
Mykhailov was born in Kharkiv, Ukraine.[1] He received an education as an engineer and started to teach himself photography.[1] He had a four-decade career as a Soviet factory photographer.[6] His work combines conceptual art and social documentary photography.[7]
Mikhailov had his first exhibition at the end of the 1960s. After the KGB found nude pictures of his wife he was laid off his job as an engineer and started to work full-time as a photographer. From 1968 to 1975 he shot several series documenting everyday scenes, the best known of them being the Red series. In these photographs he mainly used the colour red, to picture people, groups and city-life. Red symbolized the October Revolution, political party and the social system of Soviet society. According to Sabina Jaskot-Gill for Tate, "By drawing attention to the inescapable presence of the colour in the Ukrainian social landscape, the series suggests the extent to which communist ideology had permeated all aspects of Soviet life."[8]
In Mykhailov's Klebrigkeit (1982), he added explanatory notes, or diary-like text.
In Case History, he examines the consequences of the breakdown of the Soviet Union for its people.[9] He systematically took pictures of homeless people. It shows the situation of people who after the breakdown of the Soviet Union were not able to find their place in a secure social system. In a very direct way Mykhailov points out his critique against the "mask of beauty" of the emerging post-Soviet capitalistic way of life.
In 2004 Mykhailov first exhibited in Berlin in an exhibition concerning people living at the edge of society. He subsequently moved from Ukraine to Germany, where he resides as of 2022.[7]
Mikhailov's work is held in the following permanent collections:
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