Vorkouta

27 November 2015   •  
Written by Marie Moglia
Vorkouta

Jef Bonifacino

Spring 2015. Jef heads to the easternmost town of the European continent, to the north of the Ural Mountains: Vorkuta. A former gulag, the Soviet government sent prisoners there to tap the coal produced in the mines. Time has taken its toll, there’s no coal left and still no road to get there. Vorkuta is today an abandoned city where inhabitants’ lives slowly follow their own course.

La chasse près des anciennes mines. Terre et charbon se confondent. C’est la nuit, il fait plus froid, mais il fait jour.
Après l’avoir trempée dans l’eau bouillante, il va falloir maintenant plumer, vider, cuisiner et manger cette oie !
Natalia est une amie de Danil, mais elle en veut à Micha qui n’a pas réussi à faire acquitter son mari bandit. Micha était son avocat, sans lui, ce ne sont pas treize, mais vingt ans de prison qu’il aurait eu.
Retour à Vorkouta dans la voiture de Danil. La route de Vorkouta tourne en rond, il faut attendre l’été pour les 4×4, ou l’hiver en moto neige, afin de pousser la balade vers l’océan arctique ou les monts Oural.
Printemps à Vorkouta
Chez Micha un ami de Danil, à Vorgachor. Micha m’explique que les générations précédentes avaient un piano dans leur salon, mais de nos jours, on a une guitare.
Pause cigarette entre deux suées à la bagna. Le soleil ne se couche pas pendant l’été et reste longtemps près de l’horizon.
Un gamin devant la rivière Vorkouta, qui donne son nom à la ville. Elle longe les immeubles à l’Ouest et sépare la nouvelle ville de l’ancien quartier Rudnik, le cœur historique.
Palais de la culture de Vorgachor. Vorkouta est le quartier principal d’un ensemble de quatorze quartiers qui se succèdent le long d’un anneau de route de 56 kilomètres. Ce cercle fermé est la seule route.

Images by © Jef Bonifacino

Explore
Readers picks #354
Readers picks #354
Bastien Brillard and Élise Toïdé, our readers picks #354, express what they feel through their pictures. One adresses a passionate love...
23 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Your favourite monthly discoveries of July 2021
Your favourite monthly discoveries of July 2021
Here’s a focus on five of the readers’ favourite discoveries, presented in July 2021 on Fisheye’s website: Mélanie Patris, SMITH...
02 August 2021   •  
Written by Anaïs Viand
Muse, military jacket and disposable cameras: Lucie Hodiesne Darras’s Chinese portrait
Muse, military jacket and disposable cameras: Lucie Hodiesne Darras’s Chinese portrait
“I try, through my pictures, to highlight what a person is about. To elevate people and the atmosphere that surrounds them”, Lucie...
15 July 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts
Your favourite monthly discoveries of June 2021
Your favourite monthly discoveries of June 2021
Here's a focus on five of the readers' favourite discoveries, presented in June 2021 on Fisheye’s website: La Fille Renne, Cecilia Sordi...
12 July 2021   •  
Written by Anaïs Viand
Our latest articles
View all articles
Readers picks #355
Readers picks #355
Alexander Kaller and Stephen Sillifant, our readers picks #355, both escape the frenzy of our world to produce peaceful images – a...
30 August 2021   •  
Written by Fisheye Magazine
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski's Chinese portrait
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski’s Chinese portrait
Trained as a musician, British artist Max Miechowski turned to photography after a long trip to Southeast Asia. Portraits...
25 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Instagram selection #312
Instagram selection #312
Through portraits or landscapes, the artists of our Instagram selection #312 never stop experimenting. All of them seek new textures and...
24 August 2021   •  
Written by Joachim Delestrade
The labourer who turned mud into silver
The labourer who turned mud into silver
With Zilverbeek (Silver creek), Lucas Leffler explores the myth of a worker who made his wealth from the mud that lined the bottom of a...
23 August 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts