Skip to Content
Jonas Bendiksen
Books
Projects
Online course
About
Contact
Shop
0
0
Jonas Bendiksen
Books
Projects
Online course
About
Contact
Shop
0
0
Books
Projects
Online course
About
Contact
Shop
Shop Satellites 1st edition, signed
IMG_2692-Edit.jpg Image 1 of 12
IMG_2692-Edit.jpg
IMG_1532.jpg Image 2 of 12
IMG_1532.jpg
IMG_2003.jpg Image 3 of 12
IMG_2003.jpg
IMG_1539.jpg Image 4 of 12
IMG_1539.jpg
IMG_1535.jpg Image 5 of 12
IMG_1535.jpg
IMG_1994.jpg Image 6 of 12
IMG_1994.jpg
IMG_1542.jpg Image 7 of 12
IMG_1542.jpg
IMG_1544.jpg Image 8 of 12
IMG_1544.jpg
IMG_2004.jpg Image 9 of 12
IMG_2004.jpg
IMG_2006.jpg Image 10 of 12
IMG_2006.jpg
IMG_1548.jpg Image 11 of 12
IMG_1548.jpg
IMG_2007.jpg Image 12 of 12
IMG_2007.jpg
IMG_2692-Edit.jpg
IMG_1532.jpg
IMG_2003.jpg
IMG_1539.jpg
IMG_1535.jpg
IMG_1994.jpg
IMG_1542.jpg
IMG_1544.jpg
IMG_2004.jpg
IMG_2006.jpg
IMG_1548.jpg
IMG_2007.jpg

Satellites 1st edition, signed

from €500.00
Sold Out

Rare 1st edition copy of this out-of-print book.

This culmination of a fascinating seven-year photographic journey takes viewers through the countries and enclaves once held in orbit by the immense gravity of Moscow, the nucleus of the Soviet empire. Now each region is on its own in a chaotic political environment, sometimes without diplomatic recognition from neighbors, much less the international community.

Abkhazia, an unrecognized country on the Black Sea, was once the natural pearl of the empire, where bellicose generals and productive factory managers came to relax. The spacecraft crash zones between Russia and Kazakhstan reveal a Soviet-inflected version of the entrepreneurial spirit. In Transdniester, a breakaway region of Moldova that survives by functioning as a giant black market for illicit traffic in all manner of goods, from leftover Soviet munitions to bootlegged booze, Bendiksen was expelled on the grounds that he was a "protagonist in an international spy ring."

These 62 hauntingly beautiful and often arresting color photographs unsentimentally reveal the often grim circumstances in these half-forgotten regions, uniformly poor and polluted, and often politically unstable. We may not hear much about them today, but we will certainly hear more as the fall of the Iron Curtain continues to reverberate throughout the region.

Published by Aperture (english edition)

Language:
Add To Cart

Rare 1st edition copy of this out-of-print book.

This culmination of a fascinating seven-year photographic journey takes viewers through the countries and enclaves once held in orbit by the immense gravity of Moscow, the nucleus of the Soviet empire. Now each region is on its own in a chaotic political environment, sometimes without diplomatic recognition from neighbors, much less the international community.

Abkhazia, an unrecognized country on the Black Sea, was once the natural pearl of the empire, where bellicose generals and productive factory managers came to relax. The spacecraft crash zones between Russia and Kazakhstan reveal a Soviet-inflected version of the entrepreneurial spirit. In Transdniester, a breakaway region of Moldova that survives by functioning as a giant black market for illicit traffic in all manner of goods, from leftover Soviet munitions to bootlegged booze, Bendiksen was expelled on the grounds that he was a "protagonist in an international spy ring."

These 62 hauntingly beautiful and often arresting color photographs unsentimentally reveal the often grim circumstances in these half-forgotten regions, uniformly poor and polluted, and often politically unstable. We may not hear much about them today, but we will certainly hear more as the fall of the Iron Curtain continues to reverberate throughout the region.

Published by Aperture (english edition)

Rare 1st edition copy of this out-of-print book.

This culmination of a fascinating seven-year photographic journey takes viewers through the countries and enclaves once held in orbit by the immense gravity of Moscow, the nucleus of the Soviet empire. Now each region is on its own in a chaotic political environment, sometimes without diplomatic recognition from neighbors, much less the international community.

Abkhazia, an unrecognized country on the Black Sea, was once the natural pearl of the empire, where bellicose generals and productive factory managers came to relax. The spacecraft crash zones between Russia and Kazakhstan reveal a Soviet-inflected version of the entrepreneurial spirit. In Transdniester, a breakaway region of Moldova that survives by functioning as a giant black market for illicit traffic in all manner of goods, from leftover Soviet munitions to bootlegged booze, Bendiksen was expelled on the grounds that he was a "protagonist in an international spy ring."

These 62 hauntingly beautiful and often arresting color photographs unsentimentally reveal the often grim circumstances in these half-forgotten regions, uniformly poor and polluted, and often politically unstable. We may not hear much about them today, but we will certainly hear more as the fall of the Iron Curtain continues to reverberate throughout the region.

Published by Aperture (english edition)

All images

©

Jonas Bendiksen