Arnold Weber took a collective portrait of a generation forced to live one day at a time. From the author: “I try to be sensitive, hear, feel and see everything that is happening now with the “youth”. It is important for me to know what is bothering them and what are the reasons for this concern. If, for example, they drink, then they have reasons for it, even if they do not know it.
It seems to me that when photographing young people, I look back at myself, trying to find answers to the questions of what I want, do I understand what I want, what interests me, do everyday life, complexes stifle me, do I feel pressure from an unstable city, the emptiness from which everyone is running or trying to fill.
When trying to find ourselves (to hear ourselves), we often get social apathy, avoiding problems into a deep frenzy due to the inability to solve them, lack of faith in ourselves. This culminates in one day life. As I wrote in my book, “Yesterday I am everything” is at the same time a motto, a creed, a confession, a repentance and a promise of a generation that is forced to live one day.”