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flatiron

Flatiron Building (Couple), 2003
Gold-toned gelatin silver print
Created in 2023
Image sizes
7 1/2 x 7 1/2 inches, edition 15
12 x 12 inches, edition 15
17 x 17 inches, edition 10

Flatiron Building, New York, 2002

Flatiron Building, New York, 2002
View from Fifth Avenue
Toned gelatin silver print
Image: 7 1/2 x 7 1/2 inches, edition 15
Image: 12 x 12 inches, edition 15
Image: 17 x 17 inches, edition 10

El Dorado, Central Park, New York, 2024

El Dorado, Central Park, New York, 2024
Gelatin silver print
Signed and dated on verso
Edition 10
8 3/4 x 8 3/4 inches and 12 x 12 inches

Central Park in Winter, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir, New York, 2024

Central Park in Winter, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir, New York, 2024
Gold-toned gelatin silver print
Signed, titled, and dated on verso
Edition of 10
8 3/4 x 8 3/4, 12 x 12 and 16 x 16 inches

New York Public Library, 2017

New York Public Library, 2017
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm)
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm)
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm)


After spending over thirty years photographing the cities of St. Petersburg, Venice, and Havana, in the early 2000s, Titarenko turned his lens toward a very different place: New York City. In all his series, Titarenko crafts each print by hand in his darkroom, producing a rich, subtle range of tones that renders each print unique. The prints from his New York series are notable for his application of partial bleaching and selective sepia, selenium, and gold toning, as well as for the use of the nineteenth-century Sabattier effect, also known as pseudo-solarization. The toning is seen here in the soft warmth of the lampposts on the snow-covered pavilion outside the iconic New York Public Library building. Titarenko’s masterful printmaking also helps to highlight his longtime interest in water and its relationship to the city, bringing out the texture and reflective quality of snow and rain and infusing each image with moisture and light. A print from this edition can be found in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

58th Street, New York, 2012

58th Street, New York, 2012
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm)
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm)


Titarenko is known for applying long exposure to street photography, an innovation that introduces the notion of time to the two-dimensional print. This technique reaches its peak in his photographs of New York, where buses, taxis, trains, and planes are in constant movement against a backdrop of both turn-of-the-century façades and the multivalent, overlapping signage of the modern era. In this photograph, this use of long exposure combines with Titarenko’s painterly application of selective toning. A crowd surging across 5th Avenue and 58th Street softens into a blur; while the viewer’s eye is drawn to a taxicab, a street lamp, an American flag, a traffic light, and the dynamic play of the sunlight through the branches of a tree. In the lower right corner, a single figure sits in contemplation, his posture reminiscent of Rodin's famous sculpture Le Penseur (The Thinker). A print from this edition can be found in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

couple with umbrella, midtown manhattan

Couple with Umbrella, New York, 2014
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm), edition of 25
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm), edition of 10


In this photograph, shot outside the New York Times building in Midtown Manhattan, a couple huddled together under an umbrella is the focal point in a rainy urban scene. The surrounding city — the tall buildings against the sky, the traffic filling Eighth Avenue, the other passers-by — are rendered in innumerable shades of gray, while the couple at center is emphasized with rich, darker tones, approaching but never quite reaching pure black. Titarenko’s selective toning gives warm, muted hues to the umbrella they share, as well as to the soft light on the distant horizon, which is reflected in the glass awning overhead. The overall effect is to evoke a classic New York City scene, as well as a moment of intimacy in a famously teeming and fast-paced city.

Midtown Sunrise, 2018

Midtown Sunrise, 2018
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm), edition of 5
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm), edition of 5


In Midtown Sunrise, an everyday scene — a tree on a busy city block — becomes a moment of awe and grace. Titarenko frames a solitary tree in the center of a whirlwind of passers-by and vehicles, and crowns its branches with a halo of gold. As Sean Corcoran, curator of photography at the Museum of the City of New York, wrote in his essay for Titarenko’s 2015 monograph The City is a Novel, “For Titarenko, each city and its people dictate the images he creates. His images reflect his attempt to reach a deeper understanding of place through the effects of history. It should not be surprising, then, that Titarenko’s vision of New York resonates with the work of Alvin Langdon Coburn and Alfred Stieglitz—men who strived to embody the dynamism of the city and its people in photographs at the turn of the twentieth century. As Titarenko’s relationship with New York grows and changes, so too will the photographs he creates. It is the nature of his working method.”

Corner La Esquina, New York, 2013

Corner La Esquina, New York, 2013
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm)
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm)


Like 58th Street and Midtown Sunrise,Corner La Esquina is a celebration of the life of New York as manifested through the symbols and signs that punctuate its streets and buildings — from street signs and traffic lights to placards and advertisements. Here too, Titarenko’s selective toning is at work, animating the neon lights spelling out the name of the famous La Esquina café on the corners of Lafayette and Kenmare Streets in Soho as well as the headlights of a taxi paused on the corner. A print of this photograph can be found in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

Bryant Park, New York, 2004

Bryant Park, New York, 2004
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm), edition of 10
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm), edition of 10


One of the earlier images from Titarenko’s New York series, Bryant Park exemplifies Titarenko’s singular ability to capture a dazzling range of tones in his prints. The bright backdrop of the park and city skyline encompasses innumerable shades of gray, allowing the delicate shapes of branches, buildings, lampposts, and even individual windows to distinguish themselves through subtle shifts in tone. In the central foreground of the image, a passerby stands out mid-stride and anchors the image, crossing the soft shadows of the trees arching above him. Prints of this photograph can be found in the collections of the Denver Museum of Art and the Museum of the City of New York. This photograph was also recently on view in the Museum of the City of New York’s 2019-20 exhibition “Collecting New York’s Stories.”

Morningside Park, New York, 2015

Morningside Park, New York, 2015
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm)
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm)


Morningside Park is unique in this series in that it captures the city in a state of nature, with no buildings, streets, or vehicles visible. The only signs of the surrounding bustle of urban life are many footprints on the snowy path that at the center of the image. Still, the scene is distinctively New York: Titarenko shows the rugged cliffs and outcroppings on the edge of Manhattan that are intrinsic to the design of Morningside Park. The striking composition of this photograph, with the path bisecting the image vertically and the elevation dropping steeply from left to right, further emphasizes this topography. A print of from this edition can be found in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York, and this photograph was also recently on view in the museum’s 2019-20 exhibition “Collecting New York’s Stories.”

Fire Alarm Box, Little Italy, New York, 2013

Fire Alarm Box, Little Italy, New York, 2013
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm), edition of 25
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm), edition of 10
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm), edition of 10


Titarenko’s images of New York convey the passage of time in the city — not just through the technique of long exposure, which shows the passage of minutes, but also through his subject matter, which highlights the rapid changes in the city over many years. In this image, Titarenko draws our attention to one of the city’s old fire alarm boxes, which were installed around a century ago to allow passers-by to alert the city to fires. Today, cell phone calls have taken the place of street-side fire alarms; but preservationists have worked to save and maintain these ornate vestiges of an earlier era. Titarenko’s signature gold toning imparts to this antiquated, often overlooked object an aura of dignity, even grandeur; the glow is reflected in a glimmer of sunlight behind the trees and on the distant sidewalk.

factory

Domino Factory, New York, 2011
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
10 x 10 inches, edition of 10



Domino Factory, New York, 2011, frames the iconic Domino Sugar Refinery in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, against the backdrop of the Williamsburg Bridge and the skyline of lower Manhattan. Shot less than ten years ago, this image already captures so much that no longer exists — the factory, built in 1856, is currently being redeveloped, and the skyline is now all but remade by the presence of the mammoth tower at One World Trade Center. Titarenko’s masterful palette is on full display here, from the pure but muted highlights in the snow and in the wake of the passing tugboat to the myriad shades of the skyline and clouds. Notable, too, is Titarenko’s command of texture, which allows him to evoke in a visceral way both the coarse, aging brick of the refinery as well as the silvery sheen of the East River.

Chrysler Building, New York, 2005

Chrysler Building, New York, 2005
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm), edition of 10
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm), edition of 10
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm), edition of 10


Chrysler Building, New York, is one of the earlier images from Titarenko’s New York series, and is unusual in that it shows the effect of Titarenko’s long exposure through the movement not of cars or pedestrians, but of clouds. Also striking is the composition, in which the Art Deco landmark juts diagonally into the frame, its spire pointing almost to the corner of the image. This singular take on such a frequently photographed building — famously shot by Margaret Bourke-White, as well as gallery artist George Tice (b. 1938, Newark) — is distinctively Titarenko’s, and isolates the structure in a way that offers a new perspective on an iconic building. 

Fifth Avenue, New York, 2010

Fifth Avenue, New York, 2010
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
7 x 7 in. (17.8 x 17.8 cm), edition of 15
12 x 12 in. (30.5 x 30.5 cm), edition of 10
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm), edition of 10


Fifth Avenue, New York, 2010 captures one of the city’s most iconic streets in winter, the gutters and awnings coated with snow and the passers-by huddled under umbrellas against the sleet. Cars and buses rush up the avenue so quickly that they are visible only by their headlights, which are blurred to streaks before Titarenko’s open shutter. As in 58th Street, New York, 2012, Titarenko applies selective toning to an overhanging flag and to the sheen of twilight against a glassy façade. His careful composition captures the rushed movement of life in the city, which sweeps across the frame toward the viewer from left to right. Titarenko draws our eye to a single figure, framed exactly in central foreground and rendered slightly darker than his fellow pedestrians; leaning forward into his stride, he brings a sense of individual life to this classically urban tableau. 

Streetlight on Bowery, New York, 2010

Streetlight on Bowery, New York, 2010
​Unique toned gelatin silver print, handmade in the darkroom by the artist
Signed, titled, dated, and editioned by the artist on verso
16 x 16 in. (40.6 x 40.6 cm)
Edition of 10


In Streetlight on Bowery, the ghostly passage of a crowd across a crosswalk recalls Titarenko’s earlier, now iconic images of crowds in a very different city, post-Soviet St. Petersburg. The long, curving neck of a streetlight provides a frame within the image’s borders, arching over the broad expanse of Bowery as it stretches uptown. Titarenko uses the city’s long, unswerving avenues to his advantage, capturing whole swathes of the city in a single image. In the foreground, the edge of the historic Bowery Savings Bank, designed by Stanford White, is visible; at a distance, the upper windows of Soho’s historic Germania Bank Building are tinged with gold, while the unmistakable silhouette of the Empire State Building peeks out behind it. Titarenko’s deft printing and toning paint a cloudy sky overhead, changeable and charged with depth and feeling.

“Alexey Titarenko first came to New York in 2002, but he wasn’t in a hurry to make pictures of the city. He was already in the midst of investigating the urban environments of both Venice and Havana. The photographer eventually moved to New York and came to know the city through long walks and close observation. New York proved unlike his previous subjects; its rapid growth in the twentieth century, the rise of towering skyscrapers of glass and steel that dominate the skyline of Manhattan and downtown Brooklyn, along with the street grid designed by urban planners two hundred years ago, has profoundly impacted the physical look and psychology of its inhabitants. The high-rise buildings on the grid have a dramatic effect at street level, creating canyons with sharp shafts of light and shadow. The verticality of the city, with its curtain walls, tends to obscure any sense of community or common history. To the casual observer, the city can feel cold and impersonal. However, from his home in Harlem, the photographer’s meanderings revealed neighborhoods and a more intimate city whose citizens pursued their personal orbits. 

“Beginning in 2004, Titarenko slowly began to photograph New York, but he only truly took up the city as his subject after 2010. His work in New York continues today, but it is already possible to compare some of his latest images with his earlier bodies of work. Titarenko remains a Symbolist photographer. Using time exposure and darkroom technique, his goal is still to create a print that expresses his experience when creating the image. As Irina Tchmyreva has written, his photographs “paint with symbols, lifting them to the surface from the murk of reality.” With New York as his subject thus far, the built environment assumes a stronger presence. Several images, including Domino Factory and Sail, both from 2011, make use of wide horizons, creating distant viewpoints uncommon in previous work. Even the images that are reminiscent of previous work made at street level with ghostly traces of passersby, such as 58th Street, 2012, and Fifth Avenue, 2010, reflect the dominance of New York’s architecture over the individual.

“For Titarenko, each city and its people dictate the images he creates. His images reflect his attempt to reach a deeper understanding of place through the effects of history. It should not be surprising, then, that Titarenko’s vision of New York resonates with the work of Alvin Langdon Coburn and Alfred Stieglitz—men who strived to embody the dynamism of the city and its people in photographs at the turn of the twentieth century. As Titarenko’s relationship with New York grows and changes, so too will the photographs he creates. It is the nature of his working method.”

Sean Corcoran, Curator of Prints and Photographs, Museum of the City of New York
From the essay “New World,” as published in The City is a Novel (Damiani, 2015)

Titarenko's New York series was exhibited at Nailya Alexander Gallery in "New York: Stieglitz to Titarenko," 2012, and in "Alexey Titarenko: New York," 2015. Prints from this series can be found in the collection of the Museum of the City of New York, which also included this series in the 2020 exhibition "Collecting New York's Stories."

Biography

Click here to read Titarenko’s essay City of Shadows, published in The City is a Novel (Damiani, 2015), in which he describes his coming-of-age as an artist, the social and political context of his work, and some of his greatest influences, in particular Dostoyevsky and Shostakovich.

Born in 1962 in Leningrad, present-day St. Petersburg, Titarenko began taking photographs at a young age and studied in the Department of Cinematic and Photographic Art at Leningrad’s Institute of Culture. He had his first professional success with his series Nomenklatura of Signs (1986-1991), a biting critique of the Soviet bureaucracy that drew on the aesthetics of Kazimir Malevich, Aleksandr Rodchenko, and other artists of the early 20th-century Russian avant-garde. Working in secret, Titarenko conceived the series as a way to translate the visual reality of Soviet life into a language that expressed its absurdity, and to expose the Communist regime as an oppressive system that converted citizens into mere signs. In 1989, Nomenklatura of Signs was included in Photostroyka, a major show of new Soviet photography that toured the United States.

Titarenko rose to international prominence in the early 1990s for City of Shadows, a series of photographs of his native city made in the aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union and inspired by the music of Dmitri Shostakovich and the novels of Fyodor Dostoevsky. Titarenko’s application of long exposures, intentional camera movement, and expert printmaking techniques to street photography produced a powerful meditation on an urban landscape still suffused with a history of suffering. In the decade that followed, his pursuit of the city of his youth led him as far afield as Venice — St. Petersburg has been called "the Venice of the North" due to its canals and to the influence of the European architects who helped build the city — and Havana, whose streets and buildings remain frozen in the Soviet era.

In recent years, Titarenko has turned his lens toward a very different city: New York. In this work, Titarenko brings his longstanding concerns with time and history to bear on a relatively young city known for its relentless, headlong pace. Titarenko’s distinctive long exposures and selective toning highlight the way that architecture not only gives form to the lives of a city’s inhabitants, but also stands as an embodiment of its history. Even in New York, time stands still, if just for a moment: in the defunct fire alarm boxes still posed on busy street corners; in turn-of-the-century façades adorned with the multivalent, overlapping signage of the modern era; and in buildings like the Domino Sugar Factory, a powerful example of the city’s rich past meeting its implacable present.

In 2015, Titarenko’s first monograph, The City is a Novel, was published by Damiani and selected by The Wall Street Journal as one of the best photobooks of the year. For Titarenko, the city not only shapes and influences each individual’s mindset and point of view; it is also a creative force, the stage for narratives in which each of us becomes his or her own distinct character. As he writes in the book, “Universal emotions perpetuated during the last century…constitute the main themes of my photographs, to the extent of transforming the most documentary among them into elements of a novel — not reportage, but a novel, whose central theme is the human soul.”

Titarenko creates each print by hand in his darkroom, producing a rich, subtle range of tones that renders each piece unique. Such masterful printing is particularly suited to Titarenko’s longtime interest in water and its relationship to the city, bringing out the texture and reflective quality of snow, rain, clouds, and urban harbors and waterways, and infusing each image with moisture and light.

Titarenko’s photographs have been shown in over thirty solo exhibitions and over forty group exhibitions around the world. His work can be found in the collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art; the Columbus Museum of Art; the Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Middlebury College Museum of Art, Middlebury, VT; the Museum of Fine Arts, Denver; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Museum of the City of New York; the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego; the Santa Barbara Museum of Art; the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the George Eastman House, Rochester; the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven; the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ; the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris; the European House of Photography, Paris; the Musée Réattu, Arles; the Musée de l’Elysée, Lausanne; the Centre National de l'Audiovisuel, Dudelange, Luxemburg; the Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow; and the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, among other museums.

Alexey Titarenko lives and works in New York City. His second major publication, Nomenklatura of Signs, was published by Damiani in 2020 and presents the titular body of work in its entirety for the first time.

Selected Exhibitions

2023
Blur at Photo Elysee museum in Lausanne, Switzerland (3 March - 25 May 2023).
Awe-Some: Time :: Materiality :: Meaning at the Harn Museum of Art (November 22, 2022 - May 14, 2023)

2022
Alexey Titarenko: City of Shadows, retrospective exhibition at the National Gallery in Sofia, Bulgaria
Alexey Titarenko at Revela'T Festival 2022 in Vilassar de Dalt, Spain

2021
Alexey Titarenko: The City of Shadows, retrospective exhibition, The State Russian Museum, and Exhibition Centre ROSPHOTO, St. Petersburg
Solo exhibition at Paris Photo, Grand Palais Éphémère, Paris, France

2020
Alexey Titarenko: City of Shadows, retrospective exhibition, Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow, Russia
Collecting New York's Stories, the Museum of the City of New York, NY, USA
Alexey Titarenko, Festival Photo La Gacilly-Baden, Austria


2018
Zerkalo: Forever After, The State Museum and Exhibition Center ROSPHOTO, St. Petersburg, Russia
Pendulum: Merci e Persone in Movimento, The MAST foundation, Bologna, Italy

2017
Alexey Titarenko: The City is a Novel, Damiani Gallery, Bologna, Italy
Alexey Titarenko: The City is a Novel, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2015
Alexey Titarenko: Photographs from St. Petersburg (1991-1999), Galerie C, Neufchâtel, Switzerland
Alexey Titarenko: St. Petersburg in Four Movements, Manège Royal, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Paris, France
Le parfums dans tous les sens, Jardins du Palais Royal, Paris, France
Alexey Titarenko: New York, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2012
Contemporary Russian Photography: Perestroika Liberalization and Experimentation, Fotofest, Houston, TX
New York: Stieglitz to Titarenko, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2011
A Revolutionary Project: Cuba from Walker Evans to Now, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA
Alexey Titarenko: Photographs 1986-2010, Lodz International Fotofest. Atlas Sztuki Gallery, Lodz, Poland
Soviet Photography in the 1980s from the Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection, Zimmerli Art Museum, New Brunswick, NJ

2010
Alexey Titarenko: Petersburg in Black & White, Late Revelations, Moscow International Photobiennale, Pobeda Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Alexey Titarenko: St. Petersburg in Four Movements, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2008
Temps perdus, curated by Gabriel Bauret, Thessaloniki Photo Biennale, Greece
Alexey Titarenko: Venice, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2007
Vital signs: Place, George Eastman House, Rochester, NY
DE L’EUROPE. Photographies, essais, histoires", Centre National Audiovisuel de Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Alexey Titarenko: Havana, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2006
Northern Lights, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2004
St. Petersburg: City of Water and City of Shadows, FotoFest, Houston, TX
Alexey Titarenko: Time Standing Still, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York, NY

2002
Alexey Titarenko: Four Movements of St. Petersburg, Reattu Museum, Arles International Photography Festival, Arles, France
Time Regained: Fragments from St. Petersburg series, Manezh Central Exhibition Hall, Moscow, Russia

2000
Alexey Titarenko, Retrospective Exhibition, Galerie Municipale du Chateau d’eau, Festival Garonne, Toulouse, France
Le Temps Inachevé, Nei Liicht Gallery, Dudelange, Luxemburg
Nomenklatura of Signs (audiovisual projection), Keep the light on..., Centre National de l'Audiovisuel, Clerveaux Castle, Luxemburg
Magician of St. Petersburg, Garry Edwards Gallery, Washington, DC, USA
Biarritz Terre d'Images, Biarritz, France

1999
Ville des Ombres: Alexey Titarenko, photographies, Musée de Nice, Galeries des Ponchettes, Nice, France

1995
New Soviet Photography, Karlsruhe Art Museum, Karlsruhe, Germany
Self-Identification, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, Norway

1996
Black and White Magic of St Petersburg, Month of European Culture in St. Petersburg, The Grand Hall of St. Petersburg Philharmonic Society, St. Petersburg

1994
City of Shadows, Gallery 21, Cultural Center Pushkinskaya 10, St. Petersburg, Russia

1993
Nomenklatura of Signs, Photopostcriptum project, State Russian Musuem, St. Petersburg, Russia

1992
Experiences photographiques russes, Month of Photography in Paris, Grand Ecran, Paris, France
Nomenklatura of Signs (audiovisual projection), Centre National de Photographie, Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France

1990
Photostroyka: New Soviet Photography, Burden Gallery, Aperture Foundation, New York (followed by a three‐year U.S. tour)

1989
Nomenklatura of Signs, Ligovka-199 Exhibition Hall, Leningrad, USSR
Visages de Leningrad, Drouart Gallery, Paris, France

1983, 1986, 1988
Solo exhibitions, Nevskiy Prospekt 90, Leningrad, USSR

1979
Annual review exhibitions of Zerkalo Photographic Club, Kirov Palace of Culture, Leningrad, USSR

1978
Zerkalo Photographic Club Second Exhibition, Kirov Palace of Culture, Leningrad, USSR
Leningrad from another side, Zerkalo Photographic Club, Kirov Palace of Culture, Leningrad, USSR