
doc! photo magazine #46 – Migration + Collective Memory
VVAA
Blow Up Press
2020
Poland
Warsaw
Grzegorz Kosmala
Aneta Kowalczyk
Aneta Kowalczyk
Grzegorz Kosmala
Daria Tuminas (prefaces)
Aneta Kowalczyk
Argraf, Warsaw (Poland)
Argraf, Warsaw (Poland)
Munken Lynx 130g
188
Munken Lynx 130g
ISSN: 2299-2855
Editor-in-chief: Grzegorz Kosmala
Guest editor: Daria Tuminas | FOTODOK
Cover: soft
Number of photographs: 191
Language version: English
doc! photo magazine #46 is dedicated to two themes: Migration and Collective Memory. Although they are presented separately, one can find here projects that discuss both topics simultaneously. Then they show how migration and collective memory interfere each other, because our memory is based on experience and this experience also/often includes migration. We are all migrants or at least come from a family with a history of migration.
Featured projects:
- Tehran Diary by Parisa Aminolahi (text by Haleh Anvari)
- Let Me In by Jean-Marc Caimi & Valentina Piccinni
- Over the Line by Juan González Fornes
- The Event in Focus Is (Not) Over by Délio Jasse (text by Dr. Mark Sealy, MBE)
- This Creaking Floor and All the Ceilings Below by Bart Lunenburg
- Bled Runner by Camille Millerand
- Project Iceworm by Anastasia Mityukova (text by Cat Lachowskyj)
- Jigsaw by Yu Yu Myint Than
- The Precarious Archive - Act 1: The Truman Monument (1947, 1963) by Stefanos Tsivopoulos
Interviews and essays:
- We the Migrants - Anna Akage in conversation with Anna Fiń (illustrated with photographs by Dinu Li and Zula Rabikowska)
- The Precarious Archive - Natasha Christia and Daria Tuminas in conversation with Stefanos Tsivopoulos
- Above the Fold: From Columbine to COVID - Marianne Hirsch in conversation with Lorie Novak
- Yan Morvan - à propos Bobby Sands - essay by Georges Vercheval
This edition of doc! photo magazine has been produced in cooperation with FOTODOK from Utrecht, the Netherlands.
doc! - when the story matters
Cover photo: Home. Drawing by an 8 years old Syrian boy travelling with his family to Germany. Taken from the project Let Me In by Jean-Marc Caimi & Valentina Piccinni.