Răsu’ - plânsu’ – “laughing through tears”
Răsu’ - plânsu’ – “laughing through tears” – is a Romanian expression deeply rooted in the national culture, capturing the coexistence of laughter and sorrow. It reflects the subtle tensions and contradictions observed in everyday urban life—particularly in a city where past and present continually collide.
During the communist period, especially under Ceausescu’s systematization program (1974–1989), hundreds of villages were relocated to new apartment blocks—large-scale collectives known locally as “blocuri”. Many rural families who had lived in single-family homes or farmsteads found themselves in uniform, compact flats in Bucharest’s outskirts. These new residents carried with them rural lifestyles and expectations, later adapting their apartments and surrounding communal spaces—closing balconies, painting facades, adding planters, marking spaces with improvised barriers—to recreate a sense of home and community in an anonymous and rigid environment. Personal adjustments became a means to humanize and domesticate these concrete landscapes and are a personal response to an imposed architectural order. In doing so, residents break through the monotony and uniformity of the planned city, creating a patchwork urban reality shaped as much by official design as by lived experience.
The project was exhibited at Bucharest Photofest 2025 (page dedicated to my exhibition) and Abuja Photo Festival 2025.
More details: https://www.agaluczakowska.com/exhibitions
The series was also featured by Der Greif in their Guest Room section and received the Face-to-Face Award — which includes portfolio feedback sessions and an Artist Feature on Der Greif’s website and social media platforms. The feedback sessions was led by the Guest Room curators: Felix Hoffmann, Mona Schubert, and Marit Lena Herrmann. In addition, the series was selected by the editors of LensCulture to be featured in the online Street Photography Awards 2025 Competition Gallery.