***SIGNED***                    
Mathias Depardon – Transanatolia (sign.)
208 pages, 24 x 30 cm , 1168 g.
Mathias Depardon – Transanatolia (sign.)
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»Transanatolia« is a journey to the border regions of Turkey. Mathias Depardon spent five years photographing the New Turkey, reaching as far as Azerbaijan and the foothills of Xinjiang, where Turkey represents the ever-present “mother-land”. The fragmentation of the Ottoman Empire at the end of the First World War continues to be felt as a trauma, whereas the expansion of the country’s borders is meant to avenge the wounds inflicted by history..

These remote regions help us to understand the changes sweeping through part of the world. Mathias Depardon’s portraits and landscapes take the pulse of a country torn between modernization and Ottoman nostalgia.

The “New Turkey” championed by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in office since 2003, is an affirmation of power and ambition. Relying on its strategic geographical location and its imperial history, Turkey wishes to play a central role in world affairs. Erdoğan sees himself as the caliph of a vast Turkish-Islamic territory whose contours, “the frontiers of the heart,” hark back to a mythologized past.

While the fragmentation of the Ottoman Empire at the end of the First World War is an enduring trauma, the Turkish leader has imposed an authoritarian, paternalistic, police regime in an effort to recover lost lands. His methods are often as ruthless as the forced social transformations are radical.

Its influence, its “soft power” spread from the Balkans to Asia, from the Black Sea to the Red Sea. Turkey exports its popular washing machines and television series to dozens of countries. Its presence is felt in all the former Ottoman territories and as far as the Chinese frontier in Central Asia, the distant homeland of the Turkic people.

Born in 1980 in Nice, Mathias Depardon grew up between France, Belgium, and the United States. A graduate in journalism and communication from the Institut Supérieur de Formation Sociale et de Communication (ISFSC) in Brussels, he briefly worked for the Belgian daily newspaper Le Soir before devoting himself to reporting and documentary photography. In 2017, following five years spent in Turkey, he was arrested in Hasankeyf in the southeast of the country while covering water supply issues in Mesopotamia for National Geographic. He was released in June 2017, and expelled from the country. His photographs have been showcased by various organizations such as the Cervantes Institute, the French Institute, the French National Library, and more recently at the Paris Museum of National Archives’s TransAnatolia exhibition.
NoteSigned by Mathias Depardon
PublisherAndré Frère Éditions
Year
CoverHardcover
LanguageEnglish, French
ISBN979-10-92265-93-4
ContributorsGuillaume Perrier, Hamit Bozarslan
Article IDart-49296

 

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