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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
American actress Kathy Bates arrives at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
Kathy Bates and Jennie Snyder Urman arrive at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
American actress Kathy Bates arrives at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
Skye P. Marshall and Kathy Bates arrive at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
American film and television actress Skye P. Marshall arrives at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
Jason Ritter and David Del Rio arrive at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event
American actor, producer, and screenwriter Jon Cryer arrives at CBS's 'Matlock' Season 1 Emmy FYC Event held at the DGA Theater Complex at The Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703as)
LATVIA/ Skrunda / 2007.Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. Library. Skrunda was the site of two Hen House radars built in the 1960s and a Pechora radar built in the mid 1980s.The station was responsible for scanning for incoming ballistic weapons from a westerly direction. Russia completed its Baltic withdrawal in 1994, with the exception of Skrunda, Russia's most westerly radar installation and a main link in its air defence network. Latvia grudgingly agreed that Russia could maintain the Skrunda facility, allowing time for the construction of a new radar in Belarus. Russia handed back the territory of the Skrunda radar station in October 1999, and the last Russian military facility in Latvia ceased to exist.
Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug
These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.
They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.
Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.
The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".
What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks
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Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703at)
LATVIA/ Skrunda / 2007.Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. The fresco on the wall beside the portrait of Lenin describes a war scene in Afghanistan. The red shadow profile in the foreground picture is of an 'exemplary' soldier from the time of the Civil War. He is wearing a felt hat known as a boudionovka. Skrunda was the site of two Hen House radars built in the 1960s and a Pechora radar built in the mid 1980s.The station was responsible for scanning for incoming ballistic weapons from a westerly direction. Russia completed its Baltic withdrawal in 1994, with the exception of Skrunda, Russia's most westerly radar installation and a main link in its air defence network. Latvia grudgingly agreed that Russia could maintain the Skrunda facility, allowing time for the construction of a new radar in Belarus. Russia handed back the territory of the Skrunda radar station in October 1999, and the last Russian military facility in Latvia ceased to exist.
Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug
These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.
They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.
Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.
The on-going
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_44090375_REX
Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703bp)
LATVIA/ Skrunda / 2007. Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. Sports hall. On the right is written 'Victory starts here!' whilst at the back it reads 'Glory to the military sport'. Skrunda was the site of two Hen House radars built in the 1960s and a Pechora radar built in the mid 1980s. The station was responsible for scanning for incoming ballistic weapons from a westerly direction. Russia completed its Baltic withdrawal in 1994, with the exception of Skrunda, Russia's most westerly radar installation and a main link in its air defence network. Latvia grudgingly agreed that Russia could maintain the Skrunda facility, allowing time for the construction of a new radar in Belarus. Russia handed back the territory of the Skrunda radar station in October 1999, and the last Russian military facility in Latvia ceased to exist.
Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug
These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.
They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.
Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.
The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and
DUKAS/REX