Book of the Month: Come Get Your Honey
Book of the Month: Come Get Your Honey
Samet Durgun
August 16, 2021
Reenactment of an Arrival, 2019
Durgun and his camera found a very immediate, direct and intimate approach. The photographer's opening question was: “How would it be if photography was more about hearing, than seeing?” He took his time, followed daily life, and attended parties, rituals and gatherings. He became a familiar face; someone who did not focus on suffering, repression or voyeuristic displays. Instead, he accompanied those portrayed along their way and to their places of refuge in Berlin, with respect and friendship; while reporting, quite naturally, on the emancipation and individuality expressed. Durgun explains: “I have great respect for people whose identities are so complex. The struggles and power of opposition they experience become invisible to those who have access to everything they do not have: a family, a job, education, physical and mental security, a voice, or wealth.” His series takes an empathetic look at his friends and acquaintances, allowing them to step out of invisibility and reveal their strength and courage to face life. It offers hope to all those who seek a safe future and home in Berlin.
The photographer portrays his protagonists with plenty of free space. Often using narrow excerpts, he allows them to look self-confidently into the camera, placing them in their daily lives within perfect lighting and colour schemes. Impressions of urban settings appear, from time to time, in between the portraits. Severe architecture and rough street scenes, but also poetic backyard oases, become images that symbolise the mega-city's diversity and reveal unexpected discoveries, behind its many facades. In an opening essay, Marianne Ager, Curator for Photography at the Brandts Art Museum in Odense, Denmark, compares Durgun's work to photographs by Christer Strömholm and Nan Goldin, whose works also document important chapters in the stories of marginalised groups. Durgun belongs to a new and contemporary generation. This book represents a successful starting point. (Ulrich Rüter)
Samet Durgun: Come Get Your Honey
With essays by Amrou Al-Kadhi and Marianne Ager, as well as an interview with the photographer by Prince Emrah.
144 pages; 75 colour pictures. 19 x 24 cm, English.
Kehrer
Samet Durgun+-
Samet Durgun (born 1988) lives in Berlin. He is German with a Turkish background and Abkhazian roots. He has a BA from Boğaziçi University in Turkey. As a first generation immigrant, and self-taught artist, he was a guest student at the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK), and took part in their Common Ground programme for refugees and immigrants. More
Reenactment of an Arrival, 2019
Keil Li in Patricia’s Lap, 2020
Cherry Petals, 2020
Prince Emrah at Silver Future, 2018
Suryani's Body, 2020
View From the 18th Floor, 2020
Mother Tattoo, 2020
Reflection in Museum Island, 2020
At Home, 2021
A Penthouse in the Making (At Work), 2020
Backyard Flourish I, 2020
Backyard Flourish II, 2020