NEW YORK, NY.- For most people in the West, the realities of life behind the Iron Curtain have faded into caricatures of police state repression and bread lines. With the world seemingly again divided between democracies and authoritarian regimes, it is essential that we understand the reality of life in the Soviet Bloc. American photojournalist Arthur Grace was uniquely placed to provide that context.
During the 1970s and 1980s Grace traveled extensively behind the Iron Curtain, working primarily for news magazines. One of only a small corps of Western photographers with ongoing access, he was able to delve into the most ordinary corners of peoples daily lives, while also covering significant events. Many of the photographs in this remarkable book are effectively psychological portraits that leave the viewer with a sense of the gamut of emotions in that era. Illustrated with over 120 black-and-white imagesnearly all previously unpublishedCommunism(s) gives an unprecedented glimpse behind the veil of a not-so-distant time filled with harsh realities unseen by nearly all but those that lived through it. Shot in the USSR, Poland, Romania, Yugoslavia and the German Democratic Republic, here are portraits of factory workers, farmers, churchgoers, vacationers and loitering teens juxtaposed with the GDRs imposing Social Realistdesigned apartment blocks, annual May Day Parades, Polands Solidarity movement (and the subsequent imposition of martial law) and the vastness of Moscows Red Square.
Arthur Grace (born 1947) covered stories around the globe for both Time and Newsweek magazines. His photographs have appeared in leading publications worldwide including on the covers of Life, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times Magazine, Paris Match and Stern. Grace has published five acclaimed photographic books; his work has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States and abroad; his photographs are in the permanent collections of numerous museums, including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian, among others.