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Kids
Produced in 2000, Kids is a photographic series composed of individual life-sized or near life-sized portraits depicting children and adolescents photographed in post-Soviet urban environments. The series presents six portraits: a boy seated on a stool wearing a women’s swimsuit; another boy sitting down, pouting; a little girl in a short black dress smoking a cigarette; a second girl in make-up wearing a dress that reveals her arms and shoulders; and another looking exhaust


Italian School
At the time of his move to Moscow, the theme of post-Soviet childhood was one of Bratkov’s central conceptual concerns. The artist’s children-related projects significantly varied as to themes and methods, but they all dealt with the social anomalies and ruptures of the socialist society, which was losing its “innocence” in a rapid transition to capitalist realism. Employing iconography of biblical subjects, Italian School , for instance, commented on the flow of religious pr


Glue Sniffers
In this vein, the series Glue Sniffers (2000) and Juvenile Detention (2001) registered different manifestations of the failed state. The series was created in one of the detention centres in Kharkiv for troubled children (petty thieves, hooligans, drug addicts, prostitutes). Glue Sniffers. 2001. Series of 6 photographs. 90 × 90 cm


Juvenile Detention
2001. Series of 9 photographs. C-print. Dimensions variable


A Tuberculosis Dispensary
Sick children were given balloons to blow up in order to strengthen their lungs. A stark reflection of the poverty of the time. Series of 6 photographs. C-print. 27 × 40 cm


Fighters without Rules
2000. Series of 5 photographs. C-print. Dimensions variable Installation view: Canal de Isabel II, Madrid, Spain, 2009


Army Girls
At the turn of the 2000s, Bratkov was also conceptually engaged with post-Soviet social and professional types. Many of his portraits of such figures were made in Ukraine. The most striking among them were not those that reinforced age, gender, and social stereotypes of their respective professions, but those that challenged them. Series of 10 photographs. Nos. 1–9: C-print. 98 × 73 cm; no. 10: C-print. 98 ×128 cm


The Lawyer and his Wife
2001. Dyptich. C-print. 85 × 60 cm each


Sailors
At the turn of the 2000s, Bratkov was also conceptually engaged with post-Soviet social and professional types. Many of his portraits of such figures were made in Ukraine. The most striking among them were not those that reinforced age, gender, and social stereotypes of their respective professions, but those that challenged them. The latter include, for instance, Army Girls and the retired Sailors . 2001. Series of 7 photographs. C-print. 85 × 60 cm; Video 3'21''


Secretaries
2001. Series of 4 photographs. C-print. 45 × 30 cm


Steelworkers
Among his most notable series is Steelworkers . “I like the sense of professional pride of these people,” the artist explained. “In the time of wild capitalism and aggressive entrepreneurship, I found their choice of an ordinary profession more sympathetic. Driven not by money but by duty, they were, to my mind, the heroes of the time.” Bratkov later explained his decline of interest in such portraits by noting that the epoch of “ordinary heroes” had disappeared in the more p


Second Hand
The second-hand shops were a relatively new and widespread phenomenon in post-Soviet countries, characteristic of the era. For this series, the artist invited some of his friends to pose. 2000. Series of 9 photographs. 70 × 50 cm


Kabul Olympics
At the time, Slava Mogutin was living in Russia and was known primarily as a poet, often described as a kind of new Mayakovsky. Project Kabul Olympics critically juxtaposed the US military occupation of Afghanistan with the Salt Lake City Olympic Games, both of which took place in 2002. The central figure of the series is a soldier-athlete, embodied by Slava Mogutin — a poet, writer, actor, and seasoned provocateur. Moscow-based military uniform collector Sergey Ilyin provide


Life Is Pain
2001. Video 3'50’’ Installation view: exhibition "Ukraine", Pinchuk Art Center, Kiev, 2010


Fayur - Soyuz
To make a living, Bratkov worked part-time in the advertising industry at the time. This series was commissioned by a vodka company based in Ossetia, during a period of rapid growth in vodka production in Russia. Many new brands emerged, and to attract attention the agency sought a provocative approach. Bratkov presented the series as a commentary on the nature of early capitalist Russian business. Installation view: advertising billboard for Fayur-Soyuz vodka on the streets


Photobeach
Following the artist’s suggestion, his gallery organised a beach photography competition with both obligatory and free programmes. The series was created using a self-made camera with a fish-eye lens. 2002. Series of 8 photographs. C-print. Ø 16 cm


Dancers
2003. Series of 5 photographs. C-print. 40 × 27 cm


My Moscow
Gigantic, culturally heterogeneous Moscow apparently dictated to the artist new scale, optics and subject matter. Indeed, soon after he settled there, Bratkov began to create panoramic views of massive gatherings of people celebrating all sorts of national holidays, beer festivals, the city’s birthday and so on. First shown in the Regina gallery in 2002, the project My Moscow was a bold starting point in that direction, which would remain relevant for the artist throughout th


Souvenirs
The artist created this series of portraits of Buryat children at one of the official All-Russian exhibitions. The title critically alludes to the colonial and entertaining perception of ethnic minority peoples in official Moscow circles. 2003. Series of 5 photographs. C-print. 75 × 56 cm


Return of the Artist
Bratkov photographed the participating artists and added an image of a frog to his display, implying that the artist had never gone anywhere. Installation view: Russian Pavilion, Venice Biennale, 2003 2003. Series of approximately 10 photographs. C-print. Dimensions variable
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