The Myth of Men
The Myth of Men
Ahmet Polat
October 24, 2017
Posing Boys, Istanbul 2017
While gender studies tend to focus primarily on femininity and the role of women in society, Polat places the focus on man. He explores his mimicry and his gestures, he makes him physically and emotionally believable. A father swimming with his small son, a man at the barber’s, or a Dervish dancer with his billowing, white tunic: Polat’s photographs present men in situations that are far from any kind of cliché-like perspectives. Loving, sentimental and sensual, rather than muscle man and Porsche driver – this also is man.
Polat took photographs in Belgium, Turkey and the Netherlands. He was at circumcisions and at wrestling matches, he sat in coffee shops and visited industrial complexes. His pictures bring together tradition and modernity, black and white, and colour.
Taken with a Leica lens, the individual pictures are often joined together to create a film series covering the entirety of the cosmos surrounding man. Whether an exhausted worker, a tender father or a son and fighter, the role of man today is multi-faceted. He is a money-earner, a man on parental leave, a husband and a lover all in one. Or to put it differently: the macho man seems to have disappeared a long time ago.
September 8 to December 2, 2017
Leica Galerie Istanbul
Ahmet Polat+-
Born in 1978, Ahmet Polat is a Turkish-Dutch photographer who studied at the St. Joost Academy in the Netherlands. He was the first Turkish photographer ever to be given the International Center of Photography’s Infinity Award in the Young Photographer’s category. Polat has been exhibited in a variety of galleries and museums in the Netherlands and in Turkey. He has also had his commercial and fashion photographs published in international magazines, such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar and the New York Times. More
Posing Boys, Istanbul 2017
Student, Istanbul 2017
Dad and son in pool, Bussum 2017
Catching birds, Istanbul 2017
Balancing, Istanbul 2017
At the barber, The Hague 2016