“Fan Club Putin” will be on display at Photo London from May 21–24
13 hours ago
For the college-age men and women in Bela Doka’s
series, “Fan Club Putin,” the Russian president is more than just a
politician. Like a rock star or a famous athlete, he’s a beloved
personality, an icon who adorns T-shirts and bedroom walls.
Doka,
who is Hungarian, was in Russia in 2007 when a photo editor at Bolshoy
Gorodmagazine suggested he work on a story about Nashi, the now defunct
pro-Putin political youth movement. Doka agreed, but after two days of
shooting, his assistant from the magazine told him about the Putin Fan
Club. He quickly decided to change the focus of his story.
“When
I was young I had posters in my room of my idols; in Russia, they have a
different idol,” he said. “For them, Putin was a pop star.”


Yulya
Nikolaeva: “My boyfriend Kirill brought me to the club. I like VV and
it’s interesting to watch his actions. I can only say the best about
him. He’s done so much for the country.”
Yulia
Minazhetdinova: “My parents are against my hobby. They say I don’t
understand politics, but I don’t think so. Putin is my hero. He inspires
me, adds sense to my actions. I want to aspire to him.”
First,
Doka and his assistant met with the club’s organizer, Igor, at a Moscow
apartment that served as the club’s headquarters. With the help of the
club’s leadership, Doka began connecting with club members at their
homes, which were mostly in the suburbs of Moscow. “I told them honestly
that I was interested in a young generation. I told them I wasn’t into
politics, that I didn’t judge them, that I wasn’t pro or against,” he
said. “I like when I see someone’s devotion and they can show me
their devotion.”
While club members were active in
politics—many participated in Putin-related marches and protests—Doka
was more interested in expressions of identity than ideology. “They
invited me to a march through the Red Square because they wanted Putin
to come back for a third term. I went with them and followed them as if I
were doing a reportage on them, but I didn’t use any of the pictures.
It didn’t suit my imagination,” he said.
Instead,
Doka approached his project more like a fashion photographer than a
documentarian. Using his subjects’ clothing and decorative items, he
styled them and their surroundings to create an image that best captured
their love of Putin.

Left:
Vika Matorina: “Putin is the only one, he is the ideal! It had been the
tsar before and now it’s Putin, he is like God to me. I perceive him as
daddy. He is a perfect man—politician, sportsman, family man! I want my
husband to be like him!” Right: Lena: “I like it that Putin completes
everything he starts. He is a very multifaceted person, for example he
does judo, goes fishing and skiing. I think he is a good role model for
young people.”
Alina
“I have a poster with his portrait hanging near my bed. I also own a
few T-shirts with Putin’s portrait, as well as postcards and stickers. I
consider myself a patriot.”
In interviews with Doka, club members
discussed their admiration of Putin’s political accomplishments and
positions, but many also spoke fervently about his personality. Several
young woman described him as an ideal man, someone they’d want their
future husband to resemble.
Doka hasn’t followed up
with his subjects in the years since he made these photographs. But it’s
youthful sentiments like those that make him think that, for many of
them, Putin mania may have just been a passing phase, just like the
other ephemeral passions of teenagers around the world.
“I
can imagine right now most of these kids are not even devoted to Putin.
It’s like music—you like Bon Jovi for three years and then after maybe
you start to like jazz,’ he said.
“Fan Club Putin” will be on display at Photo London from
May 21–24. Doka’s most recent project is “Studio Panindigan,” a series
of portraits taken in a remote fishing village in the Philippines. It
will be on display at Art15 from May 21–23 in London.

Tanya
Skoropistseva and Lyosha Sobolkov. Tanya: “If Putin hadn’t changed
Russian politics, we’d still be cheap labor force. He said that Russia
is the country to be taken into account and it can’t be a door mat.”
Lyosha: “I do judo and I’d love him to be my trainer. I started doing
judo when Putin came to power.”
http://russia-insider.com/en/society/vladimir-putins-biggest-fans-are-college-students-who-worship-him-pop-star/ri6961
Yulya
Pipilova: “I have five different T-shirts with Putin’s portrait,
several kinds of postcards with VV on them. We design them and print
them for everyone.”
http://russia-insider.com/en/society/vladimir-putins-biggest-fans-are-college-students-who-worship-him-pop-star/ri6961
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