THE OUTCASTS

Photographer Oleg Klimov spent a total of three months in a residential psychoneurological institution (or, in Russian, a PNI). During that time, he took about 500 portraits of the PNI’s residents and learned about what life is like in some of Russia’s most closed-off, stigmatized institutions. Klimov stopped using knives and forks (only spoons were allowed in the PNI), saw a Russian Orthodox iconostasis stationed in a cafeteria, and made purchases from a store where no one ever uses cash (residents are never given their pensions in hand). While getting to know his neighbors and teaching them mathematics and photography, Klimov became convinced that the environment and the lifestyle available to any given person affects them at least as much as the individual traits they were born with.
Most PNI residents have never seen a photograph of themselves, whether on paper or on a screen. “It’s because someone at some point decided that it should be the norm to consider them so ugly and insane that even they don’t have the right to see themselves. I showed them their portraits, and the reaction was always the same: self-recognition and joy. We all lose our sanity when we lose our personal identity,” Klimov said. Even if there are “geniuses and insane people, beautiful people and ugly people, mentally ill people and people who feel completely healthy,” he said, we should all understand one another and live together.
PHOTOBOOK CHAPTERS:
Personal File| Anamnesis | Consilium
Format: 22.6 cm X 22.6 cm. 500 copies. Offset printing.
The Outcasts Photobook (ISBN 978-5-6047801-4-5) will be printed in spring 2025 in the EU in two editions: in Russian and English, but you can already now make a prepayment, which will guarantee free delivery of the book to the address you specify + author's signature
Buy the book in Russia | Buy the book in EU
The photobook “Outcasts” includes photographs taken in residential psychoneurological institutions and psychiatric hospitals in Russia: Tatarstan, Ulyanovsk, Samara, Khabarovsk, Sakhalin regions, Krasnoyarsk Krai and annexed Crimea.

