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MOSCOW: all exhibitions

- List of expositions -




Lap-horse Video. Film retrospective 1999 - 2009
Lap-horse Video. Film retrospective 1999 - 2009
Blue Noses
October 4 - 31, 2010 Arched Hall, Winzavod
/ more...







Household Surrealism
Household Surrealism
Iliya Chichkan
September 23 - November 19, 2010
/ more...







Political & Touristic Video
Political & Touristic Video
Blue Noses
August 7 - September 10, 2010
/ more...







Reverse
Reverse
Recycle (Andrey Blokhin, Georgy Kuznetsov)
June 10 - July 30, 2010

The Recycle group is among those contemporary artists who do not announce their position too noisily, and, instead, prefer not so much to uncover problems or provoke confrontation as to look for compromises and the means of making peace between incompatible and competing aspects of the modern world – a world, of course, made up first and foremost of concepts and images, which are the traditional territory of artists. / more...















Death and the Artist
Death and the Artist
Dmitri Gutov
28 April – 23 May, 2010

Is it possible to examine in practice how "iron" the logic of Rembrandt's form-making is? Following Mikhail Lifshitz' ideas about the total identity in logos of being and its rational content ("I think, therefore existence is thinkable"), the artist Dmitry Gutov began to materialize very literally the metaphor of "iron logic." / more...







Superweiss
Superweiss
Alisa Ioffe
Since March 10, 2010

Alisa Ioffe's exhibition at Guelman Projects on Malaya Polyanka Street is the concluding action in the Black Works programme, which explores the possibilities and limitations of contemporary non-figurative painting. / more...







Chechen Women\'s Team of Parachute Jumping
Chechen Women's Team of Parachute Jumping
Alexey Kallima
March 5 - April 22, 2010

In large, almost monumental canvases the artist depicts the training sessions of the top parachute jumping team of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, which no longer exists. Creating a photographic effect of authenticity, he embodies in the images that Chechnya, which we, perhaps, can see today in documentary photographs. That Chechnya without the war which lasted off and on for 12 years. That Chechnya which he saw with his own eyes in pre-war Groznyy.
Where there were vast de-privatised spaces, no man's territories, in which fences served the industrial needs of production or just as a symbol of the administrative demarcation of land. Where it was possible to freely enter almost any territories – building sites, institutes, stadiums... Where also the social divisions of time allowed for it to be passed more freely... he watched the training sportswomen, who were truly engrossed in soaring in the clouds under cupolas of white silk.
Now Alexey Kallima, having referred back to those images in his memory in which technology, the body and dream are combined with the raptures of flight and soaring, finding the source of pictorial delight in the past delight of the observer, is offering his version of that which was really important and valuable in Socialism. Meaning the spatial, sensory, corporeal settings of Socialist life in the nineteen eighties, exceedingly far from the dream, but which today, particularly in the Caucasus, call forth nostalgic memories of a peaceful and stable life. And the achievements of pre-Stalin culture which followed the dream and, in essence, existed predominately in a state of dream.
The obvious allusions to Deineka, who also loved the heavenly spaces populated by the new man who had mastered technology, indicate such interest in the socialist past. In fact, this comparison is far from perfect. Because the slightly frightening, though progressive technological nature of Deineka's graphics, which anticipated the 3D graphics of contemporary computer games, here acquires the form of flat images mimicking contemporary digital photography. Watching them the eye is not absorbed in the perspective of the three-dimensional image, but remains on the surface of the contemporary media way of looking. Here lies the modesty of the contemporary artist, careful in the creation of visual illusions. This comparison allows one to notice as well that Kallima's paintings are also free of another frightening side of the Art of Socialist Realism, its link with imperial ideology. In the complex development of history and ideas Contemporary Art is acquiring more and more tangible regional connotations. For the remaining elements of the "big style" we are obliged, most likely, to nostalgia which, possibly, could be progressive. In as much as Fine Art, immersed in the space of dream, is still capable of anticipating the visible and sensory forms of future life. / more...







Thirty Steps to the Sea
Thirty Steps to the Sea
Victoria and Vlad Yurashko
From February 3, 2010. Guelman Projects on Malaya Polyanka 7/7-5

The name of the project describes the device employed by the artists in their quest for an adequate visual incarnation of the concept of the "sea." The sea becomes the symbol of a universum as such – or of eternal nature which, in the words of Boris Pasternak, "brings to naught" the metrics of the life and cognitive efforts of the little man. / more...







Red Line
Red Line
Sergei Anufriev
January 26 - February 22, 2010
/ more...





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