Non ti piace? Non importa! Puoi restituircelo entro 30 giorni
Non puoi sbagliarti con un buono regalo. Con il buono regalo, il destinatario può scegliere qualsiasi prodotto della nostra offerta.
30 giorni per il reso
From 1998 to 2005, photographer Ivan Sigal worked, lived and travelled in Central Asia, traversing Russia, Kazakhstan,§Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Afghanistan. He roamed with a dual identity: on the one hand designing media§projects with local communities; on the other, an itinerant documentarian. The images from his multi-year odyssey reveal§the unsettled lives of Eurasians in provincial towns and cities. Alongside the photos, an episodic narrative unfolds:§vignettes chronicling Sigal s encounters while tracing his restless passage through the landscape. Through image and§text, White Road addresses what was left behind when the Soviet Union s ideological superstructure was stripped§away, eliminating the grand narrative that imposed meaning on people s lives. The cumulative effect is that of a search§without a centre or an apparent goal. We sense that circumstances of history and power propel us subject, traveller,§and reader from encounter to encounter, and from place to place. The term white road means safe journey in§Kazakh, Kyrgyz and Uzbek. These words are printed on road signs at the edges of Central Asian towns, wishing travellers§well as they enter the emptiness of the steppe.§Ivan Sigal is a documentary photographer who works on long-term storytelling projects. Born in 1969 in Pennsylvania,§he has lived for extensive periods in the former Soviet Union and in Asia. Sigal s Eurasia work has been exhibited in cities§across the former Soviet Union and in the United States. He also designs and creates international media projects,§with a focus on networked communities.