Yesterday's Sandwich
By (Author) Boris Mikhailov
Phaidon Press Ltd
Phaidon Press Ltd
1st January 2007
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
779.092
Hardback
128
Width 340mm, Height 235mm, Spine 35mm
2020g
This is the first book ever published on the famous Russian photographer Boris Mikhailov s fascinating early body of work entitled the Superimposition series. Boris Mikhailov (b.1938) is the most influential Russian photographer living today. An artist, a documentary photographer and a social observer, he has experimented with many photographic styles and his work is highly respected by both the photography world and contemporary art lovers. In this series from the late 60s to early 70s, he has overlayed two colour slides, creating fascinating ""sandwiches"", i.e beautifully composed tableaux of glamorous naked women, surreal urban landscapes and strange scenes of everyday Soviet life.
'surreal tableaux in which scenes of everyday Russian life collide with strange landscapes and glamorous images of naked women. At times they seem like the fantastical outpourings of a fevered mind; at others [...], they make a sharp political point.' Metro 'Each image is made of several slides superimposed to form the 'visual sandwich'. The results are fascinating, varying from the surreal and the disturbing to the beautiful and the sublime. ... [an] excellent publication' Amateur Photographer
Boris Mikhailov is one of the former Soviet Union's most influential living photographers. Born in 1938 in the Ukraine, he lived in his hometown of Kharkov until the collapse of the USSR. Trained as an engineer, he worked in a factory until 1968, when he was forced to quit his job and became a photographer. Mikhailov's work has been exhibited in major museums all over the world, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1993, the Kunsthalle in Zurich in 1996, and more recently the Fotomuseum in Winterthur, which organized a retrospective show of his work in 2003. He lives in Berlin.