Evros: Life on the Banks
Antonios Pasvantis
Evros, the river that forms the natural boundary between Greece and Turkey, flows as both a border and a lifeline. For over a decade, Antonis Pasvantis has traced its banks, creating Evros: Life on the Banks—a body of work that reveals the striking beauty of the landscape while uncovering the human stories woven into its waters. His photographs document the coexistence of Christian communities, the Sunni minority, and the last remaining Alevi Muslim community in Greece, observing their rituals, festivals, and daily struggles in a region shaped by tradition and labour.
The river is also a point of passage, where hopes for a better future confront the realities of migration and border control. Pasvantis captures these fragile moments of tension and resilience, documenting a frontier where aspiration and hardship meet.
Balancing the lyrical and the documentary, this long-term project presents Evros not only as a geographical divide, but as a force that sustains life, memory, and culture. Through his lens, Pasvantis reveals the hidden face of a critical region—where beauty and adversity flow side by side, shaping stories that extend far beyond the river’s banks.

Antonis Pasvantis is a photographer and profesor of photography, who is based in Kavala, Nothern Greece. His work is focusing on vulnerable groups of people, small communities of the minorities in Balkans and issues such as poverty, borders crossing and coexistence of different religious groups in Thrace.























