DAVID BOWIE IN THE SOVIET UNION
APRIL 1-OCTOBER 22, 2023
David Bowie in the Soviet Union is guest curated by Olya Sova with Joes Segal, Emma Diffley, and Anna Atkeson. Special thanks to Geoff MacCormack and Jo Clark. The exhibition is generously supported by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Catalogue design by Ananya Madiraju
Following the Japanese leg of his international Ziggy Stardust/Aladdin Sane tour in 1973, David Bowie traveled on the Trans-Siberian Express. Geoff MacCormack, one of Bowie’s closest friends, accompanied him during this period as a backing vocalist and percussionist. Using a Japanese Nikkormat camera, MacCormack captured private and relaxed moments as well as spontaneous social gatherings and performances during the journey. These images, previously exhibited at New Holland Island in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and the Brighton Museum Gallery in England, document an intimate relationship between the photographer and his subject.
Bowie decided to travel by boat and train from Japan to France because of his air travel phobia combined with his eagerness to visit the Soviet Union. He and MacCormack took the SS Felix Dzerzhinsky from Yokohama, Japan, to Nakhodka, Siberia, from where they traveled to Khabarovsk to embark on a one-week train ride to Moscow. They stayed in Moscow for two days, visiting the Kremlin and the GUM department store and attending the May Day parade before continuing their travels to Paris via Warsaw and East Berlin.
For David Bowie in the Soviet Union, the Wende Museum presents a selection of MacCormack’s photographs alongside the film The Long Way Home, Bowie’s own 16mm footage from the trip interspersed with photographs by MacCormack. These and many more images are presented in MacCormack’s recent book David Bowie: Rock ‘n’ Roll with Me, published in 2023.
David Bowie and Geoff MacCormack, The Long Way Home, 1973, 16mm footage, duration 7:47 minutes
Courtesy of the artists
Film
Soviet Regulations on Photography, 1973, typewriting
Courtesy of Geoff MacCormack
Artemy Troitsky, Interview with David Bowie in the USSR, 1996, duration 20 minutes
Courtesy of the artist