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Bunker of former Soviet naval base in the Baltic Sea. Liepaja, Latvia.

Former bunker for West-German government during nuclear war. Mariental, western Germany.

Gravestone in Soviet army graveyard.Potsdam, eastern Germany.

Lenin statue. Vilnius, Lithuania.

Former Soviet airforce base. Grossenhain, eastern Germany.

Communist demonstration. Moscow, Russia.

Pilot school on former Soviet airforce base. Altes Lager, eastern Germany.

Pilot school on former Soviet airforce base. Altes Lager, eastern Germany.
Born in The Netherlands in 1962, Roemers is a member of the GKf photographers association. After having studied at the Academy of Visual Arts, Architecture and Design in Enschede, Martin Roemers immediately began to create real photographic projects that took him to Germany, Cuba, the Ukraine, Afghanistan, Russia and the Balkans working among UN peacekeeping forces, as well as in The Netherlands itself in war refugee centers. His photos have been published in major international newspapers and magazines, including The New York Times, The Guardian, The Times, The Independent, Frankfurter Allgemeine, de Volkskrant and NRC Handelsblad. His work can be found in important collections such as those of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, the Legermuseum in Delft, the Netherlands, the Industriemuseum Sachsen in Chemnitz, Germany and the Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in Bonn. He was the 2000 and 2002 winner of the first Foreign News prize in the 밪ilver Camera Contest of The Netherlands? He is represented by the Hollandse Hoogte Agency in the Netherlands and LAIF in Germany.
Martin Roemers has been working on a photo project about 밨emains of the Cold War?for the last few years. Every war, won or lost, has its monuments and memorials. Of the Cold War, the war that never came, there is nothing only the traces in the landscape such as deserted army barracks, bunkers and former borders. These remains will sooner or later disappear. Martin Roemers wants to document these relics of the Cold War in photographs before they have really disappeared. He is interested in those remains which appear to be untouched and frozen in time: the ruins of our modern history. It is also a story about the beauty of decay.
http://www.zoom-net.com/common/articoli/articolo.asp?LANG=E&ID=4288
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