
Two Girls
Boryslav, Ukraine 2008

Kharkiv, Ukraine 2012

Tanya at the Museum Room
Hesed Arieh Jewish Home, Lviv, Ukraine 2008

Slavek, Klezmer Musician
Hesed Arieh Jewish Home, Lviv, Ukraine 2008

Women of Bershad I
Bershad Synagogue, Ukraine, 2007

Kiddush
Bershad Synagogue, Ukraine, 2007

Conversation
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Sheina and Lev
Bershad, Ukraine 2007

Yefim Vigodner
Head of the Jewish Community, Bershad, Ukraine, 2007

Rabbi Noah in Sukkah
Chernivtzi, Ukraine, 2008

Lena and Baby Yasmin
Gnivan Ukraine 2007

Pesya, Now and Then
Tulchyn, Ukraine 2007

Lighting Shabat Candles
Boryslav, Ukraine 2008

Natalia In Her Room
Gnivan, Ukraine 2007

Tanya
Uzhgorod, Ukraine, 2009

Egg Salad
For Pesach, Drohobych, Ukraine 2008

Sisters
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Yulia At Her Desk
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Yulia In Her Garden
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Yakov's House
Drohobych, Ukraine 2009

Shtetl
Czerwinsk, Poland, 2008

Shtetl II
Czerwińsk, Poland 2008

Red Fence
Boryslav, Ukraine 2007

Synagogue
Shargorod, Ukraine 2009

Synagogue Front Door
Shargorod, Ukraine 2008

Old and New
Bershad, Ukraine 2007

Family Room
Bershad, Ukraine, 2008

In the Room
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Biscuits and Oranges
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Community Center
Hesed Arieh Jewish Home, Lviv, Ukraine 2008

Museum Room
Hesed Arieh Jewish Home, Ukraine 2008

Washroom
Bershad, Ukraine 2008

Interior
Boryslav, Ukraine 2008

Windowsill
Boryslav, Ukraine 2008

Ringel's Sofa
Uzhgorod, Ukraine 2006

Piano
Vinnytzia, Ukraine, 2007

Community Room
Hesed Arieh Jewish Home, Lviv, Ukraine 2009


Kantor's project about Jewish presence and absence in Eastern Europe has evolved from personal biography to subjective documentary and consists of work created between 2004 and 2012 mainly in Poland and Ukraine.
During the first three years, Kantor used mainly black and white film to document places mostly representative of loss and memory. Later in the process, she began to use color, making the works highly saturated in order to convey the vivid reality of place and of endurance.
Kantor printed a part of this project using the palladium process, creating contact prints from the original un-enlarged black-and-white negatives, printed on 11 by 15 inch paper. Some are single images and others are diptychs and triptychs, which tell little stories akin to snapshots and family albums. This photographic language juxtaposed with the color and black-and-white works lends itself for a dialogue between past and present and allows for a wider look at a people and a culture.