Virgilijus Sonta (16 February 1952 – 22 August 1992) was a Lithuanian photographer.
Virgilijus Sonta | |
---|---|
Born | Panevėžys, Lithuanian SSR, Soviet Union | February 16, 1952
Died | 22 August 1992 Vilnius, Lithuania | (aged 40)
Known for | Photography |
Biography
editSonta's mother and father were Americans who came to Lithuania before World War II and stayed there. Virgilijus Sonta was a homosexual, but it took him many years to accept his own nature.[1] He tried to "cure" his attraction to men by taking some medications, getting into hospitals and even fasting.[2]
Sonta's first work was the series "Lithuanian Landscapes", and already in 1973, together with Romualdas Pozherskis, he opened his first photo exhibition. From a trip to Siberia and the Far East, the photographer brought a series of "Stones of the North". In his "Flight" series, he originally interpreted the myth of Icarus. Sonta filmed a lot of folk artists and artists in various parts of Lithuania. In the early 80s he was attracted by social themes and the photographer created his most emotional series "School is my home" about the everyday life of children with psychological disabilities.[3] When the political situation in the Soviet Union began to change, Sonta filmed rallies for the independence of Lithuania. the photographer constantly added pictures from the Lithuanian coast to his characteristic series "Things and Forms." After 1988, Sonta visited the United States four times and took the last series of photographs in his life, "Evening Presentment," in the deserts of Western America.[4]
Sonta once said:
Perhaps I came to this world in the wrong country, in the wrong social environment. Despite this, I believe that there is a country that would correspond to my inner state.
— Virgilijus Sonta
Exhibitions
edit- 2013. Road to the own land. Solo. "Rahmaninov court" Gallery. Saint Petersburg, Russia
- 2014. Classics of Lithuanian photography. "Brothers Lumier Center for Photography". Moscow, Russia[5]
- 2018. Tbilisi Photography Festival.[citation needed]
- 2020. Lithuanian photography retrospective. "National Museum of Taras Shevchenko". Kyiv, Ukraine
Collections
edit- MO Museum.[6]
- San Francisco Museum of Modern Art[7]
References
edit- ^ "Homoseksualumą ilgai neigęs fotografas Šonta su savimi susitaikė tik prieš kraupią baigtį". 6 December 2020.
- ^ Gleba, Galina (2020-01-19). "Виргилиус Шонта: Примирение с собой". Bird-in-flight. Retrieved 2020-01-26.
- ^ "Виргилиус Шонта. На пути к своей земле".
- ^ "Союз Фотохудожников России :: Исторические Даты".
- ^ "(Не)советские кадры".
- ^ "Virgilijus Šonta".
- ^ "Virgilijus Sonta. Works in Collection".
Bibliography
edit- "Photography: problems of poetry". Librocom. Moscow.[1]