Photographs by Boris Mikhailov
'1941. I was three years old and I can still remember the bombings, the howling sirens and the searchlights in the wonderful, dark-blue sky. Blue, blue, light-blue…' Boris Mikhailov
Boris Mikhailov, born in Kharkov, Ukraine in 1938, made his series At Dusk in his home city of Kharkov following the collapse of the Soviet Union. In it, he uses twilight to record a society in transition and to evoke childhood memories.
Mikhailov proposes a monochrome visual language to deal with this new social reality. The photographs are tinted blue, both to make them appear 'old' and to refer to the 'blue hour' of twilight.
At Dusk also refers to Ukraine's deprivation during the Second World War, which the artist experienced as a child. Few photographs of this period survive, and there is little photographic history of Ukraine during the Soviet period, so Mikhailov proposes his own constructed history as a substitute.
At Dusk is therefore a hybrid between a documentary and a conceptual project, recording but also staging a time that might be both 1941 and 1993, or neither.
Written to accompany the exhibition Twilight.
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Buy nowEvent - Island Stories: Fifty Years of Photography in Britain
Thu 14 June 2012 13:00

FREE TALK: The rapidly shifting cultural environment after 1945 provided some of the greatest photographers of recent. Discover how photographers working in Britain since the Second World War have captured the diversity of the island and its people.
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