 My name is Katarina Radovic, I'm a freelance photographer since 2006 when I graduated in Belgrade Academy of Arts. And at the moment we are standing in the cultural centre of Belgrade Gallery Art Get, where I can show you my second solo exhibition that is taking place in this gallery. The exhibition is called Until Death Do Us Part, weddings in Europe 2009, 2010. And the work has been going on for this exhibition since January 2009, and it's still ongoing because I'm planning to do a book, a monograph on a subject. The initial idea is about the wedding ceremony and the wedding day and what it implies altogether. I looked for couples which are cross-cultural, or for couples that are immigrants in some countries of Europe from a different continent, for example. It is interesting to see how some traditional customs appear to be shared between two different cultures in a way that one culture makes a concession for another, and I have some cases, I photograph some cases where, for example, something completely new happens out of an old custom. For example, a Vietnamese wedding dress in a white colour, which is a non-usual thing in Vietnam, but in Europe it becomes normal because European wedding dresses are always white. One of the most extravagant weddings was actually here in Serbia, and it's a Roma wedding in a village near Belgrade, which lasted, of course, three days minimum, and the couple arrived in a helicopter and everything was organised for 1,000 and something guests in a big tent with air conditioner and the red carpet and everything. But I must say the funny thing was that it was all done a little bit clumsily because the helicopter landed in a wrong field and then the bride had to fight with her high heels and some irregular ground and it was funny because the husband didn't really help her a lot with her dress. For me the best atmosphere at the wedding was actually in two gay weddings that I photographed. Quite by chance it was a gay wedding. In the first case it was a wedding between two girls in Amsterdam. One was Scottish, the other American, and the atmosphere was really great. One of them was a cabaret dancer and I must say that the weddings at last a bit short, not the whole day and whole night, then they can be a bit more effective and a bit more amusing and you really feel like staying there until the end not to yawn until the next morning and hope to go home. But in that way I think that Amsterdam wedding was one of the best and also because in this environment where I live it's not yet common to have... I mean, of course, they're not recognised gay marriages but for me it was a new thing to witness and also it was really good to see how nobody had anything against. No member of the family or any person present had anything against but on the other hand they were really so happy, so I was happy too.