
Niels Ackermann went 
to Ukraine for the first time in 2009 somewhat by accident. He yearned 
to photograph in Russia, but it was too expensive for his budget as a 
university student in his hometown, Geneva. Flights to Kiev were cheaper
 than to Moscow, and no visa was needed. 
He has returned to 
Ukraine dozens of times, and last year he moved to Kiev full time. While
 he did not make it to Russia in 2009, Russia, in a way, has come to 
him. Its annexation of Crimea and the war in eastern Ukraine have 
changed Ukraine. 
Mr. Ackermann covered 
the early days of the Maidan revolution but has so far stayed away from 
documenting the resulting war.  Instead, he said, he has  focused mostly
 on personal stories in Ukraine so he can “go deeper and say something 
different” than many other photographers there. His main project has 
been photographing young people coming of age in Slavutich, a planned 
community for workers at the Chernobyl nuclear plant, built after the 
accident there in 1986. 
The surprisingly 
whimsical photo essay, three years in the making, has won Mr. Ackermann 
the Rémi Ochlik award, named after the young French photojournalist who 
was killed with the reporter Marie Colvin while covering the Syrian 
uprising in Homs in 2012. Mr. Ackermann’s photos are on exhibit this 
week at the Visa Pour l’Image photo festival in Perpignan, France, and 
will receive the award there on Wednesday. 
Winning the award for a story that was not war-related, given Mr. Ochlik’s work, was unexpected, Mr. Ackermann said. 
“It’s a big surprise 
for me because I always associate Visa Pour l’Image with war photos or 
sad stories,” he said. “With this story I was trying to bring a more 
positive perspective to a story that we usually think about in a 
negative manner.”
Slavutich was built 
from 1986 to 1988 by the Soviet Union in the immediate aftermath of the 
Chernobyl disaster. Its residents include people who had to leave their 
homes within a few miles of the site as well as others who moved to the 
area in search of work at the damaged plant.
Data: 29.08.2016
Fonte: www.lens.blogs.nytimes.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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