Socialist reality in documentary photographs of Vladimir Vorobyov
The photographs of Vladimir Vorobyov, as well as other members of TriVA, the creative association of which he was a member, are of great interest to us. The mere fact that the studio’s work was objectionable to the USSR government and, as a result, it was closed, already makes us feel very curious about the work of this Novokuznetsk photographer.
Vorobyov did not recognize staged shooting and any means of editing pictures. He sought to make the most frank, vital and truthful shots about life in the Soviet Union in the 70-80s.
Woman with soup set. Novokuznetsk, 1984
Coat of the leader in the Museum of V.I. Lenin. Moscow, 1982
Feeling of motherhood. Maternity hospital number 1. Novokuznetsk, 1981
Tired hatchway. KVM. Novokuznetsk, 1980
Evening at the departmental hotel of the village of Tisul.
Look over your head. Meat row in the Central Market. Novokuznetsk, 1981
Demonstration of male abilities. Leningrad, 1982.
Women's room at the hairdresser, 1981
Women with whites and a cart of bricks, 1981
People with meat on the street Enthusiasts.
Ice cream.
Bouquet seller, Novokuznetsk, 1980
Meat of the "second freshness".
Head of department and his subordinates on haymaking.
Premature baby. Maternity hospital №1.
Lunch of the brigade of pigs. Pig farm.
Queue at the bouts of the department store. Novokuznetsk, 1982
Tram passenger.
Buying a winter coat. Department store.
Portrait with purchases.
Trying on a wedding dress.
Conversation with a friend.
Parent's day at the cemetery.
Mourning days for Leonid Brezhnev.
House with stove heating. Novokuznetsk, 1986
View the funeral of the Secretary General of the Central Committee of the CPSU Yuri Andropov by a group of first-graders. Orphanage №5. Novokuznetsk, 1984
Watch the video: Why Democratic Socialism Is Gaining Popularity In The United States (September 2024).
In France, protests against the adoption of a new labor reform are still ongoing. A huge number of local residents have been taking to the streets for several months to demonstrate their extreme dissatisfaction with the government’s decision regarding increased working hours and other innovations. ...