Boris Kosarev

{{Short description|Russian photographer and journalist}}

{{about||the Soviet-Belarusian ice hockey player and coach|Boris Kosarev (ice hockey)}}

{{more footnotes|date=June 2020}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2014}}

{{Infobox person

| image = Удостоверение фотокорреспондента Бориса Косарева, Агентство Печати Новости (cropped).jpg

| name = Boris Kosarev

| birth_name = Boris Maksimovich Kosarev

| birth_date = {{birth date|1911|10|29|df=yes}}

| birth_place = Odoyev, Russian Empire

| death_date = {{death date and age|1989|11|14|1911|10|29|df=yes}}

| death_place = Moscow, Russian SFSR

| occupation = photographer, journalist

| website = http://www.boriskosarev.com

}}

Boris Maximovich Kosarev ({{langx|ru|Бори́с Макси́мович Ко́сарев}}; 29 October 1911–14 November 1989) was a Soviet photographer and journalist. From the 1930s to the 1960s, he served as an official photographer for the Soviet government and documented key historical events, including the Yalta Conference of 1945. Kosarev is known for capturing many iconic photographs of political events and Soviet leaders.

Biography

Boris Kosarev was born on 29 October 1911 in the small town of Odoyev, Tula Governorate. At the age of 14, Boris Kosarev received a camera as a gift from his father. He began developing photographic plates, learning to work with photographic chemicals, and mastering the process of printing photographs.

From 1927 to 1929, he worked as a press operator at the Electrosvet factory while simultaneously attending photography courses at the Society of Friends of Soviet Cinema. Boris Kosarev submitted his photographs to popular newspapers and magazines, with his first works published in Vechernyaya Moskva.

In 1929, renowned Soviet writer Maxim Gorky invited Boris Kosarev to work as a photojournalist for his magazine Our Achievements, where he remained for several years. From 1929 to 1932, Kosarev's photographs were published in the Soviet magazines RABIS and Cinema and Life.

From 1932 to 1933, Kosarev worked as the official photographer for the Pribalhashstroy construction project and as a photographer for the Soyuzfoto agency. Upon his return to Moscow, Boris Kosarev worked for The Northern Route and Komsomolskaya Pravda newspapers. His photographs were also published in various other Moscow newspapers.

In 1934, Boris Kosarev joined the Soviet Army and served on the western border of the USSR in the Ukrainian SSR. He was demobilized in 1936. From 1936 to 1960, Kosarev served as the official photographer for the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union.

In February 1945, Boris Kosarev was sent to the Crimea as a photographer to document the Yalta Conference, a meeting of the heads of government of the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. Some of his images, such as The Big Three (featuring Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill), were repeatedly published in various international journals. Stalin frequently requested that Kosarev portray the Soviet delegation in the most favorable light.

From 1956 to 1958, Boris Kosarev completed photojournalism courses at the Union of Journalists. In 1960, he became a member of the USSR Union of Journalists and transitioned to working as a freelance photojournalist.

Kosarev worked as a photographer at nearly all events taking place in Red Square. He created a gallery of photo portraits and genre scenes depicting the lives of Soviet leaders, including Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Andropov.

Kosarev accompanied Soviet leaders on political visits to foreign countries, including Malenkov's visit to the UK. He photographed notable personalities such as Sholokhov, Solzhenitsyn, Rostropovich, Bondarchuk, Maya Plisetskaya, and Rockefeller{{clarify|date=May 2020}} (who visited the USSR for the 1954 US exhibition).

For many years, Boris Kosarev worked as a photojournalist for the Novosti Press Agency, TASS, and other outlets. In his later years, his photographs were published in journals such as Ogoniok and Soviet Photo, as well as in newspapers like Pravda. Boris had a particular interest in the theme of state borders, and many of his pictures were featured in The Border magazine.

Kosarev continued to work actively, photographing and writing novels and poems, until the end of his life. Kosarev died on 14 November 1989.

His son, Aleksander Kosarev (1944–2013), followed in his father's creative footsteps, becoming a Russian film director, Honored Art Worker of Russia, screenwriter, actor, and poet.

Some works

{{Empty section|date=January 2019}}

Honors

Exhibitions

  • Bucharest – Szeged – 1958
  • France – Nantes – 5th International saloon of photo art – 1960
  • Singapore – 2nd International saloon of photography – 1960
  • USA – Chicago – 1960
  • Spain – Alicante – 1960
  • France – Bordeaux – 1960
  • Hong Kong – 1960
  • United Kingdom of Great Britain – Leeds – 1960
  • Spain – Barcelona – 1960
  • Cuba – Havana – 1960
  • Hungary – Budapest – 1961
  • Australia – Melbourne – 1961
  • Norway – Oslo – 1961
  • Russia, Moscow – Museum of Moscow, Multimedia Art Museum, Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography – 2015
  • Russia, Moscow – Museum of Moscow, Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography – 2016
  • Russia, Moscow – Museum of Moscow, Moscow Manege – 2017
  • Russia, Moscow – Exhibition dedicated to Russian football and World Cup 2018 – 2018

Solo exhibitions:

  • Russia, Moscow – Gallery Lure Ultra Lounge – 2006
  • Russia, Moscow – Museum of Moscow – 2016
  • Russia, Moscow – Museum of Moscow – 2017

References

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20150724221910/http://mk.tula.ru/articles/a/827/index.php?month=09&year=2011 Elena Barkovskaya. Comrade Kosarev and comrade Churchill // Young kommunar 2011]
  • [http://press-release.ru/branches/culture/4565981d788c9/ A unique exhibition of photographs B. Kosarev. «Light in B & W» ("Light in Black and White")]
  • [http://expert.ru/russian_reporter/2008/38/boris_kosaev/ Boris Kosarev. Soviet history in the faces of "Russian Reporter" № 38 (68) 9 October 2008]
  • [http://www.proza.ru/2011/03/18/350/ Boris Maximovich Kosarev in the story "Chuhlinskoe childhood" V. Sergeechev (excerpt)]
  • [http://www.pereplet.ru:18000/text/sergeechev10apr10.html Boris Maximovich Kosarev talks about the Yalta Conference in the story "Chuhlinskoe childhood" V.Sergeechev]
  • [http://parnasse.ru/prose/large/tale/stalinskii-albom.html Boris Maximovich Kosarev "The Stalin album" in the story "Chuhlinskoe childhood" V.Sergeechev]
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20150924090936/http://www.rgali.ru/object/235309361?lc=ru%2F Photos of Boris Kosarev, archives RGALI Moscow]
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20150724210022/http://moslenta.ru/event/2015/05/14/sovietphoto/ Photos of Boris Kosarev, Center of Photography Lumiere brothers]
  • [https://tvkultura.ru/article/show/article_id/175488/ Little-known photos of Boris Kosarev are presented in the Museum of Moscow. TV Channel "Culture" 02.05.2017]
  • [https://tvrain.ru/lite/teleshow/artificial_selection/katayev_rekomenduyet-437577/ Three exhibitions to go to this summer. The TV Channel "Dozhd" 19.06.2017]
  • [https://tvrain.ru/teleshow/here_and_now/park_sovetskogo-449234/ Park of the Soviet period: TASS Opens Photo Archives. TV channel "Dozhd" 02.11.2017]
  • [http://www.forbes.ru/forbeslife-photogallery/352361-glavnye-kadry-tysyacha-rakursov-epohi-na-fotovystavke-v-manezhe?photo=9/ Main shots: a thousand views of the era at the exhibition in the Moscow Manege. Forbes.ru. 03.11.2017]
  • [https://esquire.ru/kosarev-tass-photos?nocache=1/ Photos of Boris Kosarev at the exhibition "Main shots". Esquire.ru]

{{Commons category|Boris Kosarev}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kosarev, Boris}}

Category:1911 births

Category:1989 deaths

Category:People from Odoyevsky District

Category:People from Odoyevsky Uyezd

Category:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members

Category:Soviet photographers

Category:Recipients of the Order of the Red Star