Boogie (born Vladimir Milivojevich; 1969) is a photographer from Serbia, based in Brooklyn, New York.[1][2] He has made documentary and portrait photographs of people on the margins of society[3] and street photography.[4][5]
His first book, It's All Good, was one of five finalists (not winner) for Best Photography Book of 2006 at the Santa Fe Prize for Photography.[n 1][citation needed] His work has been published in The New York Times,[1]Time,[2]The Huffington Post[3] and Huck.[4] His work was shown on the HBO show How To Make It in America[7] and he was featured in Cheryl Dunn's Everybody Street (2013) documentary film along with other photographers who have used New York City streets as a major subject in their work.[8] In 2009 Altamont Apparel had a range of t-shirts with Boogie's photographs screen-printed onto them.[9]
2008: Colette, Paris. Featured photographs from Boogie.[11]
2008: Boogie, Galerie Olivier Robert, Paris. Featured photographs from Boogie.[11]
2009: Boogie. 5 Days, AvantGarden Gallery, Milan. Photographs of Milan taken over five days.[12]
2009: When Crooks Roam the Streets, Galerie Olivier Robert, Paris.[10]
2009/2010: Noli Me Tangere = Do Not Touch Me, Galerie Olivier Robert, Paris.[10] With Joey Haley, Bili Bidjocka, Eric Pougeau, Chen Chieh-Jen, Martial Raysse, Elodie Lesourd and Lionel Scoccimaro.
2010: The Best of Times, basement gallery, Altamont Apparel, New York, NY. Solo exhibition. 700 new and old photographs.[13]
2010: The Uncovering, Carmichael Gallery, Culver City, CA. Solo exhibition of new black-and-white and colour photographs.[14][15]
2016: Blow Your Mind, Magazzini Fotografici, Naples. Solo exhibition including photographs from A Wah Do Dem.[16]
^"Boogie for Altamont Apparel". Black Sheep. 7 February 2009. Archived from the original on 22 April 2014. Retrieved 22 April 2014. The Boogie photo series: Crack Gun, Good Rat, and Solo Pitbull. 100% cotton ringspun 20 singles t-shirt with screen-print and just normal fit.