Alexey Titarenko


Alexey Viktorovich Titarenko is a Russian photographer and artist.

Biography

Titarenko was born in Leningrad, USSR, now Saint Petersburg, Russia. At age 15, he became the youngest member of the independent photo club Zerkalo. He went on to graduate with honors from the Department of Cinematic and Photographic Art at Leningrad's Institute of Culture.
Influenced by the Russian avant-garde works of Kazimir Malevich, Alexander Rodchenko and the Dada art movement, his series of collages, photomontages and images created by superposing several negatives, Nomenklatura of Signs is a commentary on the Communist regime as an oppressive system that converts citizens into mere signs. In 1989, Nomenklatura of Signs was included in Photostroika, a major show of new Soviet photography that toured the US.
During and after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991–1992, he produced several series of photographs about the human condition of ordinary people living on its territory and the suffering they endured then and throughout the twentieth century. To illustrate links between the present and the past, he created metaphors by introducing long exposure and intentional camera movement into street photography. Sources have noted that his most important innovation is the way he uses long exposure. John Bailey, in his essay about Garry Winogrand and Titarenko, mentioned that one of the obstacles that he surmounted successfully was being too visible himself and, as a consequence, people's possible reaction to his presence altering the authenticity of the image.
Titarenko's best-known series from this period is City of Shadows, whose urban landscapes reiterate the Odessa Steps scene from Sergei Eisenstein's film The Battleship Potemkin. Inspired by the music of Dmitri Shostakovich and the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky, Titarenko also translated Dostoevsky's vision of the Russian soul into sometimes poetic, sometimes dramatic pictures of his native city, Saint Petersburg.
Along with Alexander Sokurov's 2002 film Russian Ark, the City of Shadows exhibition was a part of the program celebrating the 300th anniversary of St. Petersburg at the 2003 Clifford Symposium, in Middlebury, VT: What Became of Peter's Dream? Petersburg in History and Arts The Russian Ark and the City of Shadows have one similarity: both are based on the experimental innovation: Alexander Sokurov using a single, very long – 96 minutes sequence shot and Titarenko's several minutes long exposure for some of his photographs.
In his photographs from Venice, mostly taken between 2001 and 2008, Titarenko uses "... a highly stylized technic that he put deftly in a service of strongly determined vision."Moreover, "Venice also offers him a reminiscence of Saint Petersburg, similar to a recollection found in the work of Marcel Proust, who, in Albertine disparue, recounts during his Venetian sojourn that he cannot resist comparisons to Combray." Venice, Italy creates a counterbalance, a point of comparison with Venice of the North where he was born - Saint Petersburg. In Titarenko's photographs, like in Proust's writings, "... what matters is less the scrupulous description of reality than a particular vision it renders."
Titarenko creates his prints in a darkroom. Critics have called him a master of the darkroom technique. Selective bleaching and toning add depth to his palette of grays. Like Man Ray and Maurice Tabard, Titarenko uses so-called pseudo-solarization, but unlike his predecessors, he exposes the print to light during the developing process mostly at the edges and in a subtle way that lowers the contrast and creates a very particular kind of gray silver 'veil'. In order to emphasize the dramatic aspects of the City of Shadows series, he sometimes combines the Sabattier effect with adjacency effect created during development, called the Mackie line.
Through interviews, lectures, books, curated exhibitions and two documentaries by French-German TV channel Arte, Titarenko describes a particular vision of an artist and of Art, close to that of Marcel Proust, linked to literature, poetry and classical music, placing himself far apart from contemporary tendencies developing particularly in Moscow.
A 2011 exhibition of 15 gelatin silver prints from his Havana, Cuba series in the J. Paul Getty Museum group show, A Revolutionary Project: Cuba from Walker Evans to Now, linked Titarenko's approach to street photography in contemporary Havana to that of Walker Evans in 1933, by the subjects he photographed and aspects of his printing.
Titarenko became a naturalized United States citizen in 2011; and, as of 2014, lives and works in New York City as an artist, photographer, and printer.

Publications

Publications by Titarenko

Titarenko's work is held in the following permanent collections: