• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Griffin Museum of Photography

  • Log In
  • Contact
  • Search
  • Log In
  • Search
  • Contact
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • New England Portfolio Review
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • New England Portfolio Review
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog

Corona | Julia Borissova

Posted on May 29, 2020

man behind flowers

From Running to the Edge, © Julia Borissova

First seen in 2014 at the Griffin, Running to the Edge by Julia Borissova is a beautiful series mixing image and object. Finding vintage photographs and adding organic materials, Borissova creates a sensory experience creating images as unique objects. As a featured artist in our online Corona exhibition we asked Julia about her work, and how light fills her days.

How does light play in your work?

A man in formal diplomat dress has a curve of orange flowers covering his left chest as if a shield.

© Julia Borissova

Light is an important part of photographic art and is paramount to the artist. I will not go into details of the light-sensitivity of the silver halides as a key to the photographic process. But when I see old photographs, when I hold images of people from the past in my hands, I think about those rays of light that reflected from their real bodies and reached me, me here, now. As Susan Sontag says about photography: “A photograph of a missing creature will touch me like a retarded star’s rays.” And this is what excites me the most in my work.

Your work takes vintage photos, layered with organic blooms and reconstructs narratives into new tales. In bringing light to these anonymous people, how do you know when you have found the right combination of organic textures and new memories.

Three women stand in a line with hats on and dressed in suits showing from the chest up. Daisy like flowers cover the top of their heads.

© Julia Borissova

When I was working on the Running to the Edge project, I explored means of creating content in the photos through their physical presence as objects and connecting them with natural element. I was thinking about how our memory functions. When we recall something from the past, every time we create a different image, replacing some parts with new ones. I decided to try the same with photographs – adding flowers to the old photograph, I wanted to give them a new meaning, a new life. I specifically did not create any compositions, this happens intuitively.

Anonymity is important to you in your images. Do you find that these unidentified faces lift our general assumptions based on looks that allow the light to shine?

Woman in coat and hat with pink flowers for eyes.

© Julia Borissova

My way is a different one. Found images can be always a source of my inspiration. I bought all the photos that I used while working on “Running to the Edge” project at a flea market or antique shop. These photos are connected with the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the first wave of emigration after it. Combining old photos and flowers petals, sometimes covering people’s faces and making them completely anonymous, I created an atmosphere of general and indefinite mourning for unknown to me people through the medium of photography, the medium that is traditionally valued for its claim to authenticity.

 

In this time of Corona, how do you find light in your day?

At this time, however, as always, creativity give me a sense of light, freedom and vitality.

What is next for you creatively? What are you working on?

A woman in a long dress is standing in front of a column and a purple flower covers her head and chest.

© Julia Borissova

I am working on several projects, one of which is still in the research process. Also, I continue to develop my project DOM (Document Object Model). “DOM” means a house, home or building in Russian language. I explore how our concept of home is changing over time and the notion of home is transforming in connection with the place in which we live. We are all used to moving from place to place, but today we are forced to stay at home. My question is: How have current circumstances influenced or changed our concept of “home”? I would like to collect the opinions of different people and make a small book to remember this time.

Review of Running to the Edge by Igor Lebedev –

Memory rolls in like waves causing a sudden and acute experience which doesn’t refer to a life of a specific person. This memory is connected to a cultural stratum. Everything is mixed here, the present and the past, some old photo portraits telling the stories of life which were erased by flow of time, dried flowers that represent markers of what was important but was forgotten, the memories of what happened, but couldn’t be remembered. So we can see it all in the pictures of the new series “Running to the Edge” by Julia Borissova.

The imperfection of memory provokes an artist to restore it, so in her work she turns to archives again and again, systematically reinterpreting them at the new levels of personal awareness of not ancestral memory but the memory of the nation. Through its reconstruction it’s easier to recover what has been lost and what has continued as consequences of birth traumas which took place in Russian history so often.
An archive is an anonymous evidence of elapsed time. The anonymity is inherent in a multi-level cultural de-identification of the past. However, despite the apparent constancy of its anonymity, it is surprisingly ready to manipulation according to the needs of everybody who faces it.

Two Russian soldiers with purple flowers.

© Julia Borissova

The material included in the archive has great variability of its stories, as a rule, on a superficial level, which can be read from the perspective of nostalgic feelings of the past time in the context of personal experience. But the work with an archive is not only a subconscious desire for nostalgic revival of the past or an affect of overcoming losses in a chain of generations, although it means also some sensual experiences. It is rather an intuitive feeling of the boundaries rigidly dissecting an established world order, an attempt to understand the reasons for the “explosion” that changes the lives of many generations. And, in the end, created statement based on fetishes (old photographs in this case), the objects of so-called personal museum according to Sigmund Freud is an expression of protest arising at the point where the traumatic overcoming of a loss merges with the desire to counteract the possibility of its recurrence in the future.

It seems that such attempt of expression protest is characteristic for Julia Borissova who in her works refers to events from Russian history connected with the revolution and after that the first wave of emigration. In the old pictures the author adds the multi-layer effect through the using collage technique. The pictures themselves already have the images of a distant, “frozen” by photography past while the fragments of flowers imposed on them marked the present undefined in the flow of time. The occurring in the gap of the past and the present becomes for the author the field of exploring her relationship with the historical predestination.

A man and woman in Russian formal dress with red flowers over eyes.

© Julia Borissova

The people in the photographs can’t realize their future, but for the author it’s ajar from the other side, as the future-in-the past. This is the future as the opposite shore of rapid flow of history, which destroyed the whole world, erased the relations of collective memory, forced to experience the pain of the absence of something that wasn’t experienced. And the most important, provoked a conversation about the “deformed, broken world” made in our minds by the old Soviet and the new post-Soviet society in turns, whose features have collage nature.

Igor Lebedev,
curator, photographer, historian of photography

 

About Julia Borissova – 

Julia Borissova is an Estonia-born, St Petersburg-based artist who works with photography, collage, installation and book making, to explore how history and memory are perceived through images. The book is her natural medium to contemplate real stories and blends documentary elements with imaginary things, trying to capture ephemeral, fragmentary and elusive memories.

A women's hips and partial legs cropped at the waist in a dress with pink flowers covering her from waist up.

© Julia Borissova

Her artists’ books include: Looking for Dimitry (2019), Nomad (2019), Nautilus (2018), Let Me Fall Again (2018), White Blonde (2018), Red Giselle (2017), Libretto (2016), Dimitry (2016), J.B. about men floating in the air (2015), Address (2015), DOM (Document Object Model) (2014), Running to the Edge (2014), The Farther Shore (2013).

Borissova’s books can be found in the collections of many major institutions,including Tate Modern (London), Art Museum of Estonia Library (Tallinn), Victoria and Albert Museum (London), National Library of Spain (Madrid), Bibliographic Collection of The Municipal Archives of Lisbon, Centre for Fine Print Research. UWE (Bristol), Reminders Photography Stronghold (Tokyo), Indie Photobook Library (USA), the Library of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Phoenix Art Museum (USA).

Borissova has frequently exhibited her photography and books around the world in group and solo shows.

Education:
Academy of Photographic skills in 2009-2010.
Foundation of information and cultural projects “FotoDepartament”, program “Photography as a research”, 2011-2013.
Master class: Jan Grarup (Denmark, agency NOOR) class, 2011; Morten Andersen (Norway) class, 2011, 2012; Luuk Wilmering (Dutch) class, 2012; Anouk Kruithof (Dutch) class, 2013; Jaap Scheeren (Dutch) class, 2014; Workshop of the international photography magazine FOAM.

Awards:
2019 – FOTO WIEN Photo Book Award – shortlist;
2019 – Riga Photomonth – shortlist;
2018 – Encontros da Imagem, Portugal – finalist;
2018 – Kassel Dummy Award, Germany – shortlist;
2017 – Riga Photomonth – shortlist;
2016 – “Encontros da Imagem”, Portugal – finalist;
2015 – “Unveil’d Photobook Award – winner;
2015 – FotoFilmic, Canada – winner;
2015 – Belfast Photo Festival – winner;
2014 – San Francisco International Photography Competition;
2013 – 1st place “International Fine Art Photography Competition” (France);
2013 – The Baltic Photo Biennale – winner

Recent Solo Exhibitions – 
2019 – Lullaby for a Bride, The first Factory of Avant-garde, Ivanovo, Russia
Recent Exhibitions – 
2018 – Maybe an Island, Vitland, Kaliningrad;
2017 – Julia Borissova, Artists’ Books Exhibition, Centre for Fine Print Research, Bristol, UK;
2017 – Running to the Edge, Metenkov’s House Museum, Yekaterinburg;
2016 – Beyond the Seen, The Yard Gallery, Exeter, UK

To see more of Julia Borissova‘s work visit her website.

Filed Under: Online Exhibitions Tagged With: constructed photography, Corona Exhibition, mixed media, vintage photographs, anonymous portraits, color

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Cummings Foundation
MA tourism and travel
Mass Cultural Council
Winchester Cultural District
Winchester Cultural Council
The Harry & Fay Burka Foundation
En Ka Society
Winchester Rotary
JGS – Joy of Giving Something Foundation
Griffin Museum of Photography 67 Shore Road, Winchester, Ma 01890
781-729-1158   email us   Map   Purchase Museum Admission   Hours: Tues-Sun Noon-4pm
     
Please read our TERMS and CONDITIONS and PRIVACY POLICY
All Content Copyright © 2025 The Griffin Museum of Photography · Powered by WordPress · Site: Meg Birnbaum & smallfish-design
MENU logo
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • New England Portfolio Review
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog

Floor Plan

Amy Rindskopf's Terra Novus

At the market, I pick each one up, pulled in by the shapes as they sit together, waiting. I feel its heft in my hand, enjoy the textures of the skin or peel, and begin to look closer and closer. The patterns on each individual surface marks them as distinct. I push further still, discovering territory unseen by the casual observer, a new land. I am like a satellite orbiting a distant planet, taking the first-ever images of this newly envisioned place.

This project started as an homage to Edward Weston’s Pepper No. 30 (I am, ironically, allergic to peppers). As I looked for my subject matter at the market, I found that I wasn’t drawn to just one single fruit or vegetable. There were so many choices, appealing to both hand and eye. I decided to print in black and white to help make the images visually more about the shapes, and not about guessing which fruit is smoothest, which vegetable is greenest.

Artistic Purpose/Intent

Artistic Purpose/Intent

Tricia Gahagan

 

Photography has been paramount in my personal path of healing from disease and

connecting with consciousness. The intention of my work is to overcome the limits of the

mind and engage the spirit. Like a Zen koan, my images are paradoxes hidden in plain

sight. They are intended to be sat with meditatively, eventually revealing greater truths

about the world and about one’s self.

 

John Chervinsky’s photography is a testament to pensive work without simple answers;

it connects by encouraging discovery and altering perspectives. I see this scholarship

as a potential to continue his legacy and evolve the boundaries of how photography can

explore the human condition.

 

Growing my artistic skill and voice as an emerging photographer is critical, I see this as

a rare opportunity to strengthen my foundation and transition towards an established

and influential future. I am thirsty to engage viewers and provide a transformative

experience through my work. I have been honing my current project and building a plan

for its complete execution. The incredible Griffin community of mentors and the

generous funds would be instrumental for its development. I deeply recognize the

hallmark moment this could be for the introduction of the work. Thank you for providing

this incredible opportunity for budding visions and artists that know they have something

greater to share with the world.

Fran Forman RSVP