ROSEGALLERY presents
Fantômes, a new body of work by photographer
Diana Markosian, a series that drifts between memory and movement, presence and disappearance. Drawing inspiration from Victor Hugo’s meditations on shadow and spirit, Markosian turns her lens toward the Cuban National Ballet’s interpretation of
Giselle, a work long cherished for its blend of passion, tragedy, and transformation. In her hands, the ballet becomes a living echo—an art form both luminous and fading, rooted in tradition yet marked by fragility.
Rather than freezing dancers mid-gesture, Markosian allows their motion to unravel across the frame. Limbs blur, outlines tremble, and bodies seem to float in a space where time stretches thin. The images pulse with the dancers’ shifting identities, capturing them at the threshold between the physical world and the spectral realm that
Giselle inhabits. Through soft dissolves and trembling silhouettes, the photographs whisper of a cultural inheritance that once stood firmly at the center of Cuban artistic pride but now flickers under the weight of changing circumstances.
Markosian’s background as a ballet dancer lends the series an intimate sensitivity. Her compositions recall the quiet observation of a painter, attentive to light, gesture, and emotional resonance. In
Fantômes, the dancers seem suspended in a state of becoming, as though negotiating who they are and what they represent in an evolving cultural landscape. The images hover gently between melancholy and grace, suggesting not only the story of
Giselle but also the delicate endurance of an artistic tradition navigating an uncertain future.
Known for weaving photography with cinematic sensibilities, Markosian continues to explore themes of belonging and memory through works that feel both personal and universal.
Fantômes stands as a meditation on transience—of bodies, art forms, and collective dreams—offering viewers a poignant reflection on what lingers even as it fades.
Image:
Warming up, 2024 © Diana Markosian