A Photography Exhibition About Life Behind the Iron Curtain
Text Timo Raussi Photos Visit Estonia / Peeter Langovits, Algimantas Kunčius and Priit Siimon
Alongside Fotografiska Tallinn, one of the gems of the Telliskivi Creative City is the documentary photography gallery Juhan Kuusi Dokfoto Keskus. For another month, until 26 April, the centre presents humanistic perspectives on local life between 1960 and 1990, captured by 17 photographers from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
The exhibition “Human Baltic”, whose Estonian title “So That the Human Remains” perhaps reveals its theme even more clearly, explores an era when life behind the Iron Curtain unfolded in two parallel realities. In one, everything appeared polished and orderly: five-year economic plans were fulfilled, citizens smiled, and official propaganda promised a bright future for all.
At the same time, everyday life for most people existed behind this façade. It included empty shop counters and queues for basic goods, but also moments of joy found in family life and close relationships, holidays, seaside scenes, market visits, and familiar routines that did not fit within the official image of society.

The photographers in the exhibition moved between these two realities. Some adopted subtle forms of resistance, gently breaking the illusion of propaganda through small details—expressions, silence or the atmosphere of urban spaces. Others found larger cracks in the system, capturing people as they truly were: vulnerable yet defiant, strange yet humorous, tired yet deeply human.
Visitors are encouraged to engage actively with the images, reading between the lines and noticing what is left unsaid. According to assistant curator Toomas Järvet, in a time when visual culture can feel distorted, it is meaningful to return to a period when life itself was distorted—and when honest images became a quiet form of resistance, affirming humanity.
The exhibition also reflects international cooperation, having first been shown in Tokyo in spring 2024 through collaboration between Baltic and Japanese organisations. Today, it offers Tallinn audiences a powerful and reflective look at the past, reminding viewers of the resilience, complexity and authenticity of everyday human life under a restrictive system.

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