The exhibition includes 50 art photographs depicting the life of Serbs in enclaves in Kosovo and Metohija, their homes, monasteries, customs and everyday life.
Gujon pointed out that, thanks to the lens of the French artist, the audience in Paris has the opportunity to see the reality that the media often ignores, which is what the life of people who, isolated and disenfranchised, still remain faithful to their faith, tradition and homeland really looks like.
While reports on the situation in Kosovo and Metohija often remain abstract, Katharine Cooper’s photographs bring the face, emotion and story of every person living in those conditions, the Director of the Office said.
The exhibition will be open at the Espace Bernanos gallery for a week, after which it will be installed at the Serbian Cultural Centre in Paris, where visitors will be able to view it for a month.
The opening of the exhibition was attended by numerous guests from the world of culture, art and politics, including prominent French journalists, intellectuals and representatives of cultural institutions.