
Annons

Oliver Baldwin: I had seen photos snapped by some of my friends in Stockholm, and I started to see a concept around the young people of today. To me, the youth today is a little misjudged in other books and zines about our generation. So I wanted to represent my view of the Stockholm youth at the moment, and so the zine was born.

I really don't know. I don't think that there's anything that currently defines our generation. But I think that maybe very soon, we will be defined by unemployment, and by our anger against authorities. However, this zine tries to showcase the simple pleasures of our youth.

In Sweden, I think we will be referred to as 90-talisterna, the 90s-people, just like those born in the 40s are. Or just 90s kids. That'd be cool. I would call myself a 90-talist though.

They are friends of mine and friends of the photographers featured in the zine. Each photographer was selected through friends of friends and so on. I like that the photos are personal and not set up in anyway, spontaneous. In the same style as Nan Goldin has captured New York, I want the zine to capture the Stockholm youth on a personal level, on a night out rather than in some studio.
Annons

I see the zine as a concept that hopefully will carry on with other editions over the years. I think that each generation in Stockholm always have been photographed in depth, and I see Bara Barn as the first in a series of photos about our generation in the Swedish capital.

That's probably Friends, Game Boy, and Furbys. And a lot of crap music. Oh yeah, and the Oasis.See more of Oliver's work here, and more of Bara Barn here.More more stuff about zines:Maggie Lee's Teenage Boys and GirlsI Publish a Magazine Full of Half-Naked Little Boys