Max Penson and the Soviet Modernisation of Uzbekistan 1920-1930s
Gilbert Collection, Somerset House, WC2
For almost a quarter of a century, Max Penson worked as a photographer for the Soviet newspaper, Pravda Vostoka. By the time anti-Semitism and accusations of Western influences forced him to quit in 1948, he'd amassed an archive of some 30,000 images. More than 200 are on show here, fusing a Modernist aesthetic with a socialist agenda to document sweeping social change. Women take up tractor driving, men join literacy classes, and vast construction projects are begun. Among these idealised images of Soviet life are more personal compositions, including Uzbek Madonna, Penson's portrait of a nursing mother. (0020 7845 4600). Until 24 February.