Antanas Sutkus - The Lithuanian School of photography

Yes, as we are from the same country I can witness that in Lithuania he is truly an icon - well known and respected.
 
Valdas, are there any other resources/websites with more information and photos from that school of photography that you are aware of?

You can google some names - it should give you plenty of photos in image search. The names I can recommend to check (based on my personal taste) are Romualdas Rakauskas, Aleksandas Macijauskas, Algimantas Kunčius... In the FSU they were all known to represent so called “Lithuanian school of photography”. There are some articles about this school, but mainly in Lithuanian language, maybe in Russian, so maybe those images can lead you somewhere... As far as I can tell it’s more of a style of photography that was characterized by “warmth and beauty” of simple everyday life during hard times, not anything formal in terms of technique or even philosophy.
 
Yes, very nice photography, I'm so happy that it is in b+w.

This is a great shot, could be by Cartier-Bresson.

Erik.

antanas-sutkus-vilnius.jpg
 
I found out about him in a trip to the Baltics back in 2004. How could he not be known, I thought. The truth is we know a lot about photography that came out of countries that dominated the field, principally France before the war and the US after, but precious little outside that. The few recognizable non-English speaking photographers working in the documentary tradition became known almost solely through their association with Magnum.
 
My copy of Antanas Sutkus Planet Lithuania (Steidl) has arrived. I can highly recommend this book. Typical Steidl high quality reproductions, too.
 
In general I feel, eastern European photographers are less well-known and as a result undervalued, both here and on the web in general.

Pan, why not start a thread on these photographers on RFF? I’d do it myself but it’s hardly my place, coming from the Netherlands...
 
My mother's family (nee Gustitus) came to America from Lithuania in the late 1800's.
I bought a book of Antanas Sutkus work years ago to see "the old country" I'll likely never visit.

Chris
 
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