Rob Hornstra (1975) is a documentary photographer. Since he graduated he has worked predominantly on long-term projects, both at home and on the other side of the world. His work is characterised by a stylised rawness, with a large dose of intrinsic engagement. He has published three books on his own which, despite increasing print runs, sell out ever faster. He has been commissioned by international newspapers and magazines to produce documentary series. He has also taken part in numerous (solo) exhibitions in the Netherlands and abroad. In addition to his own work as a documentary maker, he is the founder and artistic director of FOTODOK – Space for Documentary Photography.

Arnold van Bruggen (1979) is a writer and filmmaker. With his journalistic production agency Prospektor he has written and filmed numerous stories. In 2001 he published his first major reportage about the presidential elections in Iran. In 2004, his first film ‘Amsterdam-Kosovo’, about the dilemmas of humanitarian aid was selected for the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. Over the last few years Arnold has travelled to many corners of the earth, particularly Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Arnold believes in the power of a well-told story to connect people with worlds they don’t know themselves; from the Mennonite Church in Amsterdam and the uprising of Georgian prisoners of war on the island of Texel to daily life in the small, unknown country of Abkhazia. His articles reflect his personal engagement in and love for the tragic absurdity of the documentary stories he looks for.

   
PHOTOGRAPHY
On the other side of the mountains from the Russian town of Sochi, where the Olympic flame will be lighted next year, a war is being waged.



From the Caucasus' impenetrable forests and mountains, Islamist rebels are engaged in a struggle for independence from Russia, with the goal of forming the “Caucasus Emirate.”



The conflict is not confined to the North Caucasus, however. In recent years, attacks on an airport, a theater and the metro in Moscow have resulted in dozens of civilian casualties.



After protests against the Vladimir Putin-Dmitri Medvedev leadership in Moscow in late 2011, the rebel leader Dokku Umarov announced that ordinary Russians would no longer be targeted. And since then, there have been no major terrorist attacks outside the North Caucasus.



In the Caucasus itself, however, the violence continues unabated.



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ARTICLES
Save slow journalismOn the other side of the mountains from the Russian town of Sochi, where the Olympic flame will be lighted next year, a war is being waged. From the Caucasus' impenetrable forests and mountains, Islamist rebels are engaged in a struggle for independence from Russia, with the goal of forming the “Caucasus Emirate.” The conflict is not confined to the North Caucasus, however. In recent years, attacks on an airport, a theater and the metro in Moscow have resulted in dozens of civilian casualties. After protests against the Vladimir Putin-Dmitri Medvedev leadership in Moscow in late 2011, the rebel leader Dokku Umarov announced that ordinary Russians would no longer be targeted. And since then, there have been no major terrorist attacks outside the North Caucasus. In the Caucasus itself, however, the violence continues unabated. According to the independent blog Caucasian Knot, in 2012 alone, about 600 people were killed in militant attacks and counterterrorism operations, and 500 were wounded. Russian President Vladimir Putin said in October that more than 300 were killed in the three previous months. Human rights groups say the Russian government's response to the insurgency has often been brutal. In recent years, hundreds of primarily young men have been taken from their homes in the Caucasus region by security forces, according to the annual reports of Human Rights Watch on Russia. Many are imprisoned after halfhearted trials; others simply disappear, according to Amnesty International’s briefing to the U.N. Committee against Torture. During extensive counterterrorism operations, villages are sealed off, and men are arrested and taken away in unmarked vehicles. Local lawyers in cities like Nalchik and Khazvyurt showed us their filing cabinets and computers, filled with testimonials and evidence of beatings and torture in photos taken by the lawyers. "On paper, human rights are well defined here," said a lawyer in Chechnya who represents many families of terrorism defendants. He would speak only on condition of anonymity because, he said, many of his colleagues have been murdered. "But the moment you are up against a uniform and a gun, you can forget it." Human rights organizations such as Memorial in Russia try to defend young men wrongly accused of having terrorist links. The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France, is swamped with cases brought against the Russian government by families who say sons or fathers have been kidnapped by security forces. Russia colonized the North Caucasus during the First Caucasian War between 1817 and 1864. One could argue that conflict was never fully resolved. Until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, no decade passed peacefully. And the situation has not improved in the 20 years since; if anything, it has worsened. Russia is now fighting a renewed battle against a bloody insurgency to which it has yet to find an answer. – Arnold van Bruggen, Special to CNN
ABOUT THE SOCHI PROJECT
Save slow journalism
In 2014, the Olympic Games will take place in Sochi, Russia. Never before have the Olympic Games been held in a region that contrasts more strongly with the glamour of the Games than Sochi. Just 20 kilometres away is the conflict zone Abkhazia. To the east the Caucasus Mountains stretch into obscure and impoverished breakaway republics such as Cherkessia, North Ossetia and Chechnya. On the coast old Soviet sanatoria stand shoulder to shoulder with the most expensive hotels and clubs of the Russian Riviera.

Between now and 2014 the area around Sochi will change beyond recognition. The extreme makeover is already underway; refugee flats and poverty-stricken resorts are disappearing at high speed from the partly fashionable, partly impoverished seaside resort of Sochi. Thousands of labourers from across Russia and abroad live in prefab accommodation in order to have the stadiums, hotels and modern infrastructure finished on time. Helicopters fly backwards and forwards with building materials. The economic crisis is glossed over as much as possible.

Photographer Rob Hornstra and writer/filmmaker Arnold van Bruggen plan to document the changes in the area around Sochi over the coming five years. The Sochi Project will be a dynamic mix of documentary photography, film and reportage about a world in flux; a world full of different realities within a small but extraordinary geographic area.

The Sochi Project is a unique, in-depth and as such a costly project. Dutch newspapers and magazines are unable to undertake or afford a project of this scale. We think it is important that independent, documentary journalism continues to exist. That’s why we are doing it ourselves. You can make your own contribution, by becoming a donor of The Sochi Project.



AGENDA
March 10, 2013 19 P.M.
19-00 - презентация и воркшоп фотографа Роба Хорнстры и писателя Арнольда ван Брюггена, авторов проекта "Сочи". Адрес: Москва, м. Курская или Чкаловская, Земляной вал, д. 57 стр. 6. Центр ФОТОДОК
Wednesday March 27, 2013 15:30
Rob will do a talk in connection with the Atrium / Movies that Matter exhibition in Theater aan het Spui, Den Haag
March 10-24, 2013
New work from the North Caucasus will be on display during a group exhibition at FOTODOC Centre for documentary photography in Moscow: 'Russia in Focus: The image of the country through the eyes of the Dutch and Flemish Photographers'.
March 4-29,2013
Atrium Foundation Den Haag together with Movies that Matter Festival brings the Paris Photo exhibition to The Hague. Please follow this link for more information.
November 14 - 18, 2012
Large newsprint exhibition at Paris Photo 2012 / Flatland Gallery / Booth (C33) 
November 7 - December 21, 2012
Exhibition 'Empty land, Promised land, Forbidden land' on display at Hogeschool Utrecht / FEM Faculty / Cambridgelaan 100 Utrecht. Free entrance.
Thursday September 20, 2012,
Artist talk Rob Hornstra at Photo-Do, Helsinki, Finland. 18:00 PM. Please click here for more info.
September 21-22, 2012
Two-day workshop about DIY and self publishing at Photo-Do, Helsinki, Finland. Please click here for more information.
September 19-23, 2012
Work from the Sketchbook Series at Unseen Photo Fair Amsterdam (Flatland booth) and launch of the new sketchbook 'KIEV' at our own table at Offprint (Westergasfbriek).
September 15 - October 28, 2012
Work from 'Empty land, Promised land, Fobidden land' on display at Bornse Synagoge. Artist talk September 16, 15:00 PM. Please click here for tickets.
May 5-6, 2012
Two-day workshop about DIY and self publishing at Linke in Milano, Italy. Please click here for more info.
April 26, 2012
Award Ceremony for the Sony World Photography Awards 2012 in London (Somerset House).
April 20-21, 2012
World Press Photo Award Days in Amsterdam. Rob will do a presentation about The Sochi Project. Exact time will be announced later.
15 March – 21 April 2012
'Empty land, Promised land, Forbidden land' at Foto8 1-5 Honduras Street, London EC1Y 0TH. UK. Private view: 15 March, from 6.30pm. Talk on 16 March, 6.30pm.
Donations
THE SOCHI PROJECT IN NUMBERS
341
DONATORS SINCE 2009
2075
DONATED IN THE 5TH YEAR

4TH YEAR: APRIL 1, 2013 – MARCH 31, 2014

10,000    

20,000    

30,000


€ 28, 868
DONATED 4TH YEAR
€ 24,506
DONATED 3RD YEAR
€ 24,506
DONATED 2ND YEAR
€ 22,179
DONATED 1ST YEAR
For the Sochi Project, we want to travel to the region around Sochi at least twice a year for a month until 2014. Each trip costs us approximately € 15,000. Of this amount, around 20% is spent on travel costs, 20% on accommodation and living expenses, 20% on material costs, 20% on an assistant/translator and 20% on general website, design and project-related costs. For more detailed information, please contact Arnold or Rob.
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SHOP
The making of, On the other side...WEBSHOP – 03.01.13. 6 PM



Khava Gaisanova lives in Chermen, a village in the heart of the North Caucasus. In 2007 her husband disappeared, like so many men in the North Caucasus disappear without a trace – kidnapped, arrested or simply executed and buried in anonymous graves.

Writer Arnold van Bruggen and photographer Rob Hornstra met her by chance and became intrigued by her story, which is drenched with blood but punctuated by the will to survive. Hornstra and Van Bruggen then came to the attention of the security forces, who ultimately prevented them from travelling through the region. Even the strong Khava was intimidated and her family has avoided all contact since. Khava’s history reads like the history of the North Caucasus itself.

Hornstra and Van Bruggen have visited the North Caucasus numerous times between 2009 and 2012. They too became victims of the violence, corruption and abuse of power that have plagued the region for centuries. This book is a penetrating account of their travels.

200 mm x 270 mm / 352 pp + 32 pp. insert / 105 Colour Photographs / Signed copy

Book launch February 7, 2013, 17:00 PM in boekhandel Pegasus Amsterdam.
SKETCHBOOK
The making of, On the other side...ARNOLD & ROB – 07.05.13. 2 AM



Khava's husband has been declared dead; standard procedure when someone has been missing for more than five years.

Now that her family has definitively lost its breadwinner, Khava has come up with a plan to open a roadside shop. She hopes the income will be enough to support her family and educate her granddaughters. Khava is the main character of our latest book. Via her life story we were able to tell the dramatic history of the North Caucasus.

In April and May we collected money for Khava, thanks to you: readers and followers of The Sochi Project. In only two weeks we collected almost 3000 euros for her new shop. In the beginning of May with this money we went to North-Ossetia to furnish her shop. unfortunately we couldn't join her in her village, despite our efforts to get permission from the Russian security & migration services

Khava, her son, daughter in law and grandchildren are more than happy with the 'miracle' that overcame them. Hopefully this marks a new beginning in their lifes.
See some pictures here: https://t.co/oRjpAM4Ose

Rob & Arnold
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