Cast Me Not Away: Soviet Photography in the 1980s from the Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection
This exhibition is a photographic portrait of the Soviet Union in the 1980s. In over 50 works by 18 artists, it presents life as it was and showcases universal themes of human existence such as childhood, love, family, and rebellion of youth in the atmosphere of a very particular era.
The 1980s were years when Soviet society went from deep political and economical stagnation and apathy to the turmoil of abrupt political change. During a long period of “stagnation,” the aging and ossified political elite tried to conceal the increasingly apparent crumbling of the Soviet system behind increasingly phony and ostentatious propaganda. In 1986, the new leader of the country, Mikhail Gorbachev, initiated the policy called perestroika that inspired the intoxicating feeling of freedom and led to the downfall of the communist system.
Overall, for the people of the country, the 1980s were years of relative stability. Deprived of initiative, they concentrated on their individual lives and experiences. Against this background, a new kind of unofficial Soviet photography emerged that took as its central attributes the private, the personal, and the intimate. If propaganda images reflected the views of the officialdom, the new photography expressed the views of its creators, offering a testimony of human experience. It emphasized authenticity: the photographer’s genuine interest in the life of his subject, in spontaneous situations, and in the everyday world.
Cast Me Not Away presents a visual record of Soviet life just before this society, closed for decades, opened up to the rest of the world.
Organized by Julia Tulovsky, Associate Curator of Russian and Soviet Nonconformist Art
This exhibition is made possible by the Avenir Foundation Endowment Fund.