Propaganda banners in a collective farm in Sariwon.
The Pyongyang water park.
A farmer in the Sariwon collective farm
Young weman walking in downtown Pyongyang
A worker in a chemical factory of Hamhung.
Students displaying the name of their district as they are preparing for the massgames.
newly weds posing for their photos in a parc in the Sariwon Region.
Passenger exiting the a subway car in downtown Pyongyang.
A traffic officer in Kaesong.
Propaganda Poster in a chemical factory in Hamhung.
A North Korean officer in the DMZ.
Inside a collective farm in Sariwon.
Enjoying a game of table tennis in a parc of the Sariwon province.
A local guide posing for the camera in the city of Hamhung,
Bicycles rush hour in downtown Kaesong.
Highschool students posing for the camera in the city of Pyongsong.
Workers gathering grains in a factory in Hamhung.
Workers finishing their shift in a chemical factory of Hamhung
Young children practicing Taekwondo.
A waitress in downtown Pyongyang.
Pyongyang skyline.
Propaganda Banner in a collective farm in the Sariwon region.
Workers finishing their shift in a chemical factory in Hamhung.
A girl rushes to her local commute in Pyongyang
North Koreans picnicking near the beach in Wonsan.
North Koreans swimming on the east coast.
The famous Kumpang mountain sitting at the border between South and North Korea.
The democracy of people's dictatorship
On June 30th 2019, as Donald Trump was stepping into history as the first sitting U.S. President to set foot in North Korea, I was in the lobby of my hotel in Hamhung, receiving the news through the characteristically hyperbolic, overdramatic tone of the state television National TV anchor. The scene was surreal and fascinating. From all the North Koreans I interacted with after that improvised meeting in Panmunjom I felt the same sense of accomplishment and intense satisfaction. A sense of hope that finally, North Korea was being acknowledged and could just be on its way to making peace with the rest of the world.
This photo series produced around this symbolic date is a glimpse into the life in the DPRK in 2019. From the modern streets of Pyongyang to the collective farms of Sariwon, images of a country completely cut out from the rest of the world, stuck in between its obsession for past wars, god-like leaders and real pride and hope in the future of their country.