When the Sun Goes Down, 2018-ongoing. This project is an intimate portrait of Tkachova’s family, who live in Belarus, and an attempt to visually document the connections between generations of women
When the Sun Goes Down, 2018-ongoing
Malostovka, 2017. Revisiting the village where she grew up, Tkachova finds that she feels out of place here: her peers don’t visit the village too often, having gone to live elsewhere
Malostovka, 2017. These black-and-white images encapsulate both the past and the present, reflecting the different flow of time in the places of our childhood
Baginskaya, 2020. Nina Baginskaya is a famous long-time activist, often called “mother of the Belarusian revolution”
Baginskaya, 2020. In 2020, her name became synonymous with the powerful wave of protests that swelled across the nation
Between Right and Shame, 2018. This project tells the stories of Belarusian women who have considered or undergone abortion—a procedure that is legal in the country, but is still taboo for many
Animal Fear, 2017. Before turning to photography, Tkachova spent 3 year studying at the Vitebsk Academy of Veterinary Medicine. After the first surgery of her life—castration of piglets at a local farm—she was unable to continue her studies
Animal Fear, 2017. In this project, she revisits her past and documents the routine of one of her classmates who has become a vet
Vera’s Seasons, 2017. Stunned by the fashionable look of an elderly lady she saw in the street, Tkachova had to talk to her and get to know her life story through her clothes. She was wearing this very scarf when she met her future husband
Vera’s Seasons, 2017. Born in 1926, Vera stayed in the Polish, then Soviet, and finally Belarusian town of Volozhin all her life. Here, she is wearing a dress with a belt, which she inherited from her father
Vera’s Seasons, 2017. Vera’s daughter’s prom dress that was made in the Minsk Fashion House. Vera calls this stage of her life “the last seasons,” and wants to dress up for every one that is left
Vera’s Seasons, 2017. The blue dress, white scarf, and sensible shoes that Vera has set aside for her own funeral, “so that in the next world she would be comfortable and look beautiful”