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"Not to be missed is a series of large-scale portraits taken by London-based Margareta Kern. Reminiscent of the environmental portraits by the Mexican photographer Daniela Rossell, Kern's work captures a series of young Bosnian women projecting themselves headlong into maturity." St Louis Art Capsule, River Front Times, 2008
"The exhibition “Clothes for Living & Dying” is a work of a young woman, from Banja Luka, who in 1992, without having her own graduation, fleeing the war, immigrated to the United Kingdom. She stayed there, finished her education and formed views on the world, and her own identity.
But, as a person can’t become something else, without ceasing to be what they already are; in other words, it’s impossible to erase identities, instead one can layer them one on top of the other, in the way the women layer their clothes for death. In that same way, Margareta Kern, by being in her mother’s tailoring salon, and photographing in the Banjaluka homes, has done a very important self-reflective act. The imitation of life, which she captured through the graduation dresses, is in fact, in the broadest possible way, an imitation of an identity. One cannot get rid of an identity, no matter how much one wanted, no matter how much one didn’t need it anymore and no matter how much it seemed like an imitation."
By Miljenko Jergovic for Jutarnji List, Croatia, 29.05.2008 to continue reading in English click here, in Croatian click here.
"One artist looking ahead is Margareta Kern, who has produced a series of photographs of girls graduating from high school. They all wear copies of fashion worn by celebrities, made by her mother, a seamstress in Banja Luka, a town devastated during the war.The pictures encapsulate the exhibition title. The girls are "from here" — Banja Luka. The fashion is "from there" — not the place of the ominous "other," but the world of style and sophistication. Equally important is that a milestone in personal life is being passed. Young girls are turning into women. It happens everywhere — it happens to boys, too — and its acknowledgment is a sign that life goes on, even in lands where genocide occurred not so long ago." David Bonetti, St Louis Today, Feb 2008 |