militaryshirts-moscowDavid Hlynsky shot 8,000 Hasselblad images on the streets of Communist Europe from 1986 to 1990, doggedly recording the banality of the Soviet Bloc.  Primarily store windows, the photos illustrate cityscapes “devoid of the trumped up and pumped up urgency” of the West. (Above: Military shirts, Moscow 1990)

milk-moscow

I Shop, Hlynsky’s featured exhibition in the Contact Photography Festival, documents the mundane street life of Russia, Bulgaria, Poland and other regions as the Soviet bloc disintegrated. (Milk, Moscow 1990)

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As it happens, the East collapsed not because it was “evil” but because its own marketplace of ideas and things finally ran out of promise.  Eastern windows are already filling with the Western simulacrum… a new utopia built out of flash and seduction –Artist Statement (Canned fish, Moscow)

nightgowns-prague

“If we believe only the propaganda produced by Washington, Hollywood, and Moscow, the Cold War was a battle over fundamental freedoms and the rational distribution of wealth,” the exhibition notes explain. “In Hlynsky’s view, the battle was also about differing versions of our human connection to the material world.” (Nightgowns, Prague)

constructionworker-budapest

Hlynsky also took aim at pedestrians, including this construction worker, photographed in Budapest just before the visit of U.S. President George Bush in 1989.  (Below: Picking grape leaves, Bulgaria, 1989)

pickinggrapeleave-bulgaria

subwaymap-moscow

(Above: Subway map, Moscow / Below: Zippers, Bulgaria)

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The East Bloc windows I photographed were far from bankrupt. Yes, they were unpretentious, naive and seemed ironic. But they also contained an inventory of our most common human needs.  –Hlynsky

watches-clocks-prague

David Hlynsky grew up in Ohio, had Canadian relatives, and moved to Toronto in 1970 to take a job with Coach House Press.  There, he worked as a designer, darkroom technician, layout artist, typesetter and editor with colleagues that included Canadian writers Michael Ondaatje and bp Nichol.  Read more about his trajectory through holography, performance art, teaching and the rest on his biography, here.

David Hlynsky’s website, here.


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