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Self identification

At the age of 13, after another scandal at home, I packed my things and moved house to my aunt Zina. Since then, her house has become mine. In those days, she worked as a photographer at a theater and often took me to performances. Over time, I began to take her camera and take pictures of my friends, myself and surroundings. Despite my not complacent character, she strongly encouraged my love of creativity. I looked at her with admiration and under her influence my taste was formed.

In April 2018, when I was already 23 years old, Zina suddenly began to cough. These days, she was preparing to go to the South of France for a vacation. She was very tired and has worked a lot to have a break from everyday routine. She bought a new camera to play with while walking along the sea coast. A week later, she received the results of an examination of her body which concluded that she had stage four lung cancer. The trip was postponed forever.

Zina perceived this as no less than a challenge to life that she should overcome and if she will be strong she could get out from illness. Lately, the situation changed and the pain became unbearable. Her life became a matter of time and I could not fully understand that the disease was followed by death. For 8 months I watched her and tried to capture my experiences with a camera. Although Zina wouldn’t allow herself to be photographed. Only once, she did agree to a session in a hat, with her favorite cat Niasia.
During that period my internal conflict was first accompanied by a denial of Zina. I had a desire to separate her from myself. But then she passed away and something happened to me. I noticed that my manner of speaking, moving, expressing emotions – became her copy. Looking through Zina’s photo archives, I realized that things that caught her attention are the same, as caught my eye when I hold the camera in my hands.

The story of the last months of Zina’s life is my attempt to face the fact of fatalism as an indispensable part of the human experience of being dependent on the intellectual environment that makes us who we are. 

Zina. Self-portrait with Mother

Self-portrait

Zina’s Self-portrait

Zina’s self-portrait

“The voice is simple, unpretentious, sincere, as if removed psychological dependence on others.

It is as if, pure from motive and intention, but it gives out tension connected with fear of falling out of touch with what is happening. The desire to fit the situation, attachment to positive emotions, does not make the voice energy natural and spontaneous, it keeps its heads within certain limits, helpfully providing others with all the best in itself and from itself, in the desire to surpass everyone and everyone who is depressed, in quiet hope that others will guess.

Voice does not give out. Gives out an inappropriate laugh, which instead of a voice serves as a discharge of the accumulated psychological tension.”

Zina’s Self-portrait

Bloody Napkins 

Self-portrait

Self-portraits

My Self-portrait.

“The sharpness of my body movement in the presence of another, with the desire to share and be loved, hides the fear of rejection. If I losing a hoppe to get what I want my innocent joy change into isolation from another. Show off non interest in reality, tension in the body, control of emotions is only an unconscious maneuver that makes me absent of the present moment. Strong self-concern occupies the thought and makes it cycling. Remeins no place for flexibility. I becoming do not agree with reality. I trying to move space but remain in this space alone”.

Zina’s portrait with Hat

Flowers for Zina