The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography
The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography is a private exhibition organization located in the former chocolate factory and acting art cluster Red October in Moscow.
Since its foundation in 2010, the center aims to explore and promote Russian and foreign photography, support emerging Russian artists and explore beyond the medium. A private collection of Natalia and Eduard Litvinsky laid the foundation for the center's collection.
Works from the Center's collection were shown at the Fotofest 2012 Biennal, triennial Bergen Assembly in 2013, Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, museum and exhibition association Moscow Manege, Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.
The center's exhibitions were shown at the State Russian Museum and Erarta in St-Petersburg, Krasnoyarsk museum center, Cherepovets museum association, Kazan city hall, Ekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts, and Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Exhibition programme
For the past 19 years the gallery has amassed a vast collection of prints featuring chef d’oeuvres by renowned Soviet and the World famous artists: Alexander Rodchenko, Antanas Sutkus, Yakov Khalip, Vladimir Lagrange, Arnold Newman, Wynn Bullock, Ruth Orkin, Elliott Erwitt, Steve Schapiro, Guy Bourdin, Vivian Maier, Sabine Weiss, Harry Benson, Sheila Metzner, Miles Aldridge.
The center's exhibition programme aims to explore and present photography to a wider audience. The program has been built around the center’s collection and collaborations with archives, contemporary photographers, private collectors, and photography associations.
Exhibition programme is based on research activities focused on studying and interpretation of the Russian photography of the 20th century. Group exhibitions tracing the history of Russian photography from the perspective of genres (100 Years of Russian and Soviet History in Faces, PROzavod, The Moscow Stories. Twentieth century (1 and 2)) and cultural aspects (Soviet Photo, The Icons of the 1960s -1980s, The Icons of the 1990s, Time of the Little Bells) aim to put Russian photography in the context of world art history.[1]
The center puts emphasis on studying Russian photography from the 1950s to recent days. The center was the first to reintroduce reportage and club photography of the Thaw in its seminal exhibition Soviet photography of the 1960-1970s (2010). Collaboration with Lithuanian photographers and the Photography Art Society of Lithuania resulted in the project Classics of Lithuanian photography that included exhibitions The Phenomenon of the Lithuanian photography school (2010), Genius of the place (2014), Romualdas Požerskis' retrospective exhibition Large scale, Antanas Sutkus' solo exhibition Nostalgia for bare feet (2016).
Selected exhibitions
- The Soviet photography 60-70: Yuri Abramochkin, Lev Borodulin, Igor Gnevashev, Naum Granovsky, Yakov Khalip, Vladimir Lagrange
- The Phenomenon of the Lithuanian photography school: Antanas Sutkus, Vitalijus Butyrinas, Aleksandras Macijauskas
- Josef Koudelka. Invasion 68: Prague
- Ruth Orkin. Retrospective
- Steve Schapiro. Living America
- Vivian Maier. Riddle
- Arno Rafael Minkkinen. Retrospective
- Arnold Newman. Portraits and Abstractions
- Sabine Weiss. Hommage à Sabine
- Elliott Erwitt. Elliott Erwitt's Kolor at Red October
- Robert Whitman. Mikhail Baryshnikov
- Giovanni Gastel. Canons of Beauty
- Ezra Stoller. Pioneers of American Modernism
- Sheila Metzner. The Magic Of Metzner
- Harry Benson. The Beatles and more
- Miles Aldridge. Taste of colour
- Alexander Rodchenko. From the Still Art Foundation Collection
- Guy Bourdin. Follow me
Collection
The collection was established 19 years ago and now contains more than 13000 prints by Russian and foreign artists.
The collection includes works by the outstanding Russian photographers of the late 19-early 20th century: Karl Bulla, Alexander Greenberg, and Yuri Eremin.
Among the collection's major works are photographs by Soviet Avant-garde artists: Alexander Rodchenko, Boris Ignatovich, Eleazar Langman, Mikhail Prekhner, Arkady Shaikhet, Georgi Petrusov, Yakov Khalip.
The center holds an important collection of early Soviet photography presented by works of Max Alpert, Mark Markov-Grinberg, Ivan Shagin, Naum Granovsky, Emmanuil Evzerikhin, Georgi Zelma, Vladislav Mikosha.
The collection comprises war reportages by Alexander Ustinov, Mikhail Trakhman, Yevgeny Khaldei, Dmitri Baltermants, Robert Diament, Yakov Ryumkin, Georgy Lipskerov, Vasily Kunyaev. Reportage photography from the late 1940s-early 1950s is presented by works of Nikolay Khorungy, Alexey Gostev, Semen Fridlyand.
The center holds a unique collection of works by photojournalists and club photographers from the 1960s-1970s: Valentin Khukhlaev, Andrey Knyazev, Vasily Egorov, Mikhail Savin, Vsevolod Tarasevich, Alexander Abaza, Lev Borodulin, Nina Sviridova and Dmitri Vozdvyzhensky, Igor Gavrilov, Nikolay Drachinsky, Yuri Krivonosov, Vladimir Lagrange, Yuri Lunkov, Lev Sherstennikov. The center also houses an important collection of works by the founders of the Lithuanian school that emerged during the period: Antanas Sutkus, Alexander Maciyauskas, Vitaly Butirinas, Romualdas Požerskis, Vaclav Straukas, Vergilius Shonta.
The center's collection reflects alternative trends of photography that emerged in the Soviet Union in the 1970s-1980s featuring works by representatives of Kharkov school such as Valera & Natasha Cherkashin, Shilo-group, Boba-group, participants of Kazan group TASMA and Novokuznetsk TRIVA, independent photographers Vladimir Perventsev, Alexander Graschenkov, Vyacheslav Tarnovetsky, Yuri Trankvillicky, Vladimir Filonov, Igor Savchenko, and Vladimir Antoshchenkov.
Tendencies of the late 1980s - early 1990s are presented in the collection by works of the conceptual photographer Vadim Gushchin and the forefather of the Petersburg school Alexander Kitaev.
Publishing programme
Publications result from research activities and accompany the major projects of the center.
- Photo 60–70. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2008. ISBN 978-5-9901613-1-3.
- Moscow of Naum Granovsky. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2009. ISBN 978-5-9901613-2-0.
- Icons of the 1960s-1980s. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2010. ISBN 978-5-9901613-3-7.
- Icons of the 1990s. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2011. ISBN 978-5-905196-02-7.
- Soviet era by Markov-Grinberg. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography / Damiani. 2012. ISBN 978-88-6208-227-3.
- Time of the Little Bells. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2013. ISBN 9785905196034.
- The Moscow Stories. Twentieth century. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2013. ISBN 978-5-98797-076-8.
- PROzavod. Industrial photography. The twentieth century. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2014. ISBN 978-5-905196-04-1.
- The Conquest. Yakov Khalip, Heir to the Russian Avant-Garde. Moscow: The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography. 2016. ISBN 978-5-98797-129-1.
Educational programme
Its educational program aims to contribute to a greater public understanding and appreciation of photography and creating opportunities for communication and collaboration between photographers, curators, amateurs and those interested in photography. The program includes guided tours, workshops, screenings, artist talks, forums. Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Steve Schapiro, Sheila Metzner, Harry Benson, Miles Aldridge, Laurent Chehere, and other prominent artists held their workshops in the center.
Photobookfest
Photobookfest[2] is a large-scaled international event, dedicated to the photobook industry and photographic art in Russia. The festival`s programme consist of exhibition and education blocks, as well as a Photobook dummy contest.[3] Photobookfest hosted sessions of portfolio-review[4] for photographers with the participation of leading international experts. The mission of Photobookfest is to promote the photobook as an independent artistic medium in Russia, to create a dynamic and profound space for experience exchange, to educate a broad audience about the form, content and function of photobooks. The festival is an opportunity for international cultural connections, experience exchange and – most importantly – live communication.
Library and café
The center includes a café and library dedicated to photography. The library houses a large collection of books by Russian and foreign publishing houses. It encompasses books on the history and theory of photography, photography techniques, back issues of magazines Soviet photo, Ogonyek. The donations of prominent photographers and representatives of Soviet photography community – Alla Vakhromeeva, Igor Gnevashev, Ludmila Makukhina, Dmitri Vozdvyzhensky, Nikolay Rakhmanov, Antanas Sutkus, Yuri Krivonosov, Galina Gosteva, Yevgeny German, Elena Gasparova – laid the foundation for the library's collection.
Bookshop PhotoBookPoster
Bookshop PhotoBookPoster has a wide range of photography books from Russian and international publishers. The shop stocks a selection of artist’s books and zines by Shilo-group, Yana Romanova, Yulia Borissova, Igor Mukhin, Pavel Kosenko and Irina Popova. The shop hosts signing sessions and book presentations. Josef Koudelka, Romualdas Požerskis, Steve Schapiro, Greg Gorman, Tim Flach, Harry Benson, Mikhail Dashevsky, Igor Moukhin, Anton Lyalin have conducted signing sessions in the shop.
References
- "Лики ночи. Visages de Nuit. Творческая встреча с Венди Пэтон — презентация в Москве, 5 сентября 2012, Центр фотографии имени братьев Люмьер — события Look At Me". Archived from the original on 2013-04-17.
- "About ENG". photobookfest.com.
- "Photobook dummy contest 2018". photobookfest.com.
- "Portfolio review 2018". photobookfest.com.
External links
- Media related to The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Photobookfest
Media about the Center
- «The Iconic Photography of Guy Bourdin Now in a Moscow Survey» — Widewalls, 2020.
- «The Lumiere Brothers – Photo Exhibitions» — The Moscow Times, 2019.
- «Memorable monuments to American modernism – in pictures» — The Guardian, 2018.
- «Sebastian Copeland: “I’ve Been Attacked by Polar Bears a Few Times”» — Bird in Flight, 2018.
- «The Rich History of Soviet Photography, Told in 18 Images» — Wired, 2015.
- «Seven decades of Soviet photography – in pictures» — The Guardian, 2015.
- «Photography, propaganda, and the search for truth How Soviet photography changed over the course of 50 years» — Meduza, 2015.