The Many Lives of
LOMO
by Julia Ioffe

Though Lenin’s heirs didn’t
quite succeed in exporting the
Revolution to the West, they did
produce a Trojan horse of sorts.
It’s called LOMO, and it’s a
small, portable camera you can
stash in your tunic pocket,
always ready for that candid
shot of a fat cat slurping
caviar. And though the Soviet
Union is long gone, its
battalion of Trojan horses
continues to multiply under the
auspices of an Austrian company
called Lomographische AG. Just
last month, suspiciously close
to the 90th anniversary of the
October Revolution, Meg and Jack
White, the rock ’n’ roll
siblings known as the White
Stripes, came out with their
very own, limited edition
his-and-hers LOMO cameras in —
you guessed it —
cornea-scorching red.
This marketing ploy is just the
latest development in the cult
phenomenon known as Lomography,
a kind of egalitarian, populist
approach to taking pictures and,
some would argue, making art.
The technique, which is neatly
encapsulated in the
Lomographer’s mantra of “don’t
think, just shoot,” produces
blurry, on-the-fly shots that
recall the guerilla
impressionism of photo vérité.
Add to this the garish colors
produced by the cameras’ odd
focus, alternative film
development techniques, and the
optional fish-eye lens, and
you’ve got yourself an
international hipster sensation.
But back before Lomogrpahers
were holding world congresses
and building “Lomowalls” in
European capitals, LOMO was just
your typical Soviet enterprise,
striving for mechanical
excellence despite its map of
scars tracing the arc of
20th-century Russian history.
LOMO’s history goes a little
something like this.
When it was founded in 1914, the
concern manufactured World War I
gun sights for under a fittingly
belle époque name: the Russian
Stockholding Association of
Optical and Mechanical Producers
(RAOOMP). In 1930, the same year
the company was renamed GOMZ, or
State Optico-Mechanical Factory,
it came out with its first
lightweight civilian camera. It
continued its operations through
the war years, surviving the
siege of Leningrad without
ceasing its operations for even
a day, heroically pumping out
badly needed observational
optics for the front. After
1962, when it was rechristened
LOMO (or Leningrad Optico-Mechanical
Amalgamation), the enterprise
continued producing video
cameras, microscopes and
astrophysical instruments, the
largest of which, the BTA (or
Big Telescope Alt-Azimuthal),
had a diameter of 6 meters. By
the time the Soviet Union
collapsed, LOMO had produced
over 40 million of the highly
portable cameras for which it
became famous.
Like Soviet warheads, LOMO
cameras proliferated around the
globe. It was not until 1992,
when two Viennese marketing
students found one in a Prague
thrift shop that the cameras
went truly viral. The duo easily
finagled an agreement with LOMO,
which by that point was nearing
bankruptcy, and the company
granted them the sole right to
soup up and sell the cameras
anywhere outside the former
Soviet Union. It took LOMO until
1995 to realize the extent of
its blunder and cry foul, at
which point St. Petersburg’s
deputy mayor, one Vladimir Putin,
intervened at the behest of the
Austrians. He consoled LOMO with
a tax break and befriended the
company’s chair, Ilya Klebanov,
who would eventually become a
deputy prime minister. In the
end, Lomographische AG retained
“Lomography” as its trademark.
Now, with hundreds of thousands
of youths snapping photos,
sharing them on myriad web
forums, and organizing
themselves in underground
Lomography clubs, perhaps LOMO’s
latest incarnation may prove to
be more than a fad.