Alexander Kargaltsev


Alexander Kargaltsev is a Russian-born American artist, writer, photographer, actor and film director.

Biography

Alexander Kargaltsev was born in Moscow. He came to New York in 2010 to study at the New York Film Academy. Ne never came back to Russia after applying for asylum in the United States. As a photographer, Kargaltsev is known for his series of nude male portraiture. In 2012 he published a book Asylum with nude portraits of Russian gay asylum seekers in the United States. His activism works also included organization of a protest against IKEA for the removal of a photograph of a lesbian couple from the Russian edition of Ikea Family Live magazine. Kargaltsev is represented by Gallery Mooi Man in Europe and multiple galleries in the US, including "Gitana Rossa" in New York City.
His short movies, The Cell and The Well won him a scholarship at the Russian State University of Cinematography. Kargaltsev moved to New York City in 2009 after winning a scholarship in New York Film Academy and applied to asylum in United States, citing persecution, based on his sexual orientation. Kargaltsev's asylum was approved in May 2011 after nine months of hearings. The evidences gathered was presented to USA Immigration and Naturalization Services.
Kargaltsev's debut as a theatre director was the play The Net, staged in Dixon Place in New York. He directed the play Crematorium, based on a story written by Russian playwright Valeriy Pecheykin. The play was staged in its abridged version at New York's Shelter Studios and Gene Frankel Theatre.
At the time of the Sochi Olympics, Alexander Kargaltsev responded to a controversial photo of Russian-American gallerist Dasha Zhukova. On her photo, she is sitting on a chair composed of a semi-nude black woman with her legs up in the air. In order to reverse the “Visual injustice and offense” of Zhukova's image, Kargaltsev created the image with a naked Afro-American man, who is sitting on a naked white man on his back with his legs aloft.

Exhibitions

Solo

Alexander Kargaltsev works are in permanent collection of Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art.

Gallery