Vita Buivid, Olga Chernyshova and ambientTV.NET. The Russian artists Vita Buivid and Olga Chernysheva, engage in evaluating post-Soviet culture, with a methodical and impartial consistency. Nothing is rejected from the telescopic panorama and there is no hierarchy, nothing escapes the mocking irony of their gaze.
Vita Buivid, Olga Chernyshova and ambientTV.NET
The Russian artists Vita Buivid and Olga Chernysheva, engage in
evaluating post-Soviet culture, with a methodical and impartial
consistency. Nothing is rejected from the telescopic panorama and there
is no hierarchy, nothing escapes the mocking irony of their gaze.
Fashion designer, Petlyura, described as 'the king of junk', has a
collection of outmoded fashion items, acquired on a grandiose and
comprehensive scale over the last 20 years. Recently this collection was
assembled for a "junk-fashion" shoot, the cast including Petlyura's
muse, the 70-year-old winner of 1998 Alternative Miss World Contest. The
shoot was photographed by artist and photographer Victoria Buivid. Just
as the fashion collection for Petlyura was a giant salvage operation, so
is the exhibition, recycling her photographs as art exhibits. This
archival concern is symptomatic of current Russian conceptual practice:
it seeks to reclaim surviving scraps of art and, indeed, life, which
were suppressed or annihilated during the Soviet regime, and to protect
elements of Russian national identity that are fast disappearing under
capitalism.
Olga Chernyshevas work is also concerned with re-evaluation, but this
time more explicitly in the context of the wider capitalist world.
Chernyshova was selected to represent Russia in the 49th Venice Biennale
in 2001. She selects neutral environments, such as train platforms in
Europe's metro stations, creating portrait photographs of passengers.
However each person's face remains hidden, so removing the individual
identity of each portrait. Manipulating focus and camera speed,
Chernysheva produces abstract images of continual fluidity, at the same
time revealing alienation and raising awareness of life's potential for
the unexpected.
Victoria Buivid was born in Dnepropetrovsk (Ukraine) in 1962, and lives
and works in Moscow. She combines her art activities with fashion shoots
and has exhibited in Russia and abroad, including; 1994,
Photoreclamation, The Photographers Gallery, London; 1997, Gallery
Werdermann Art, Hamburg. Her works are in Museum collections in Moscow,
St. Petersburg and Helsinki.
Olga Chernysheva was born in Moscow in 1962, graduating in 1986 from the
State Film Institute and in 1995 from the Amsterdam State Academy. She
lives and works in Moscow and Amsterdam. She has had numerous
exhibitions including: 1998, Galerie Christine Konig and Franziska
Lettner, Vienna; 1997, Single Works, Galerie Singel 74, Amsterdam; 1993
Galerie Krings-Ernst, Cologne. Her work is in museum collections in
Moscow, St Petersburg, MOMA, New York and in Vienna.
ambientTV.NET (http://www.ambienttv.net)
The ambientTV.NE collective have created a site-specific audio/visual
piece to complement and respond to the work of the Russian artists. The
ambientTV.net collective functions as a generative network, creating
systems and spaces for the investigation and evaluation of site-specific
forms. It specialises in hybrid media projects and installations. Based
in London, they have made projects in Austria, Hamburg and Estonia, as
well as their on-line work.
Events at the gallery:
Talk by Lisa Le Feuvre from The Photographers Gallery: 12 June, 7pm.
Admission: £4, concs. £ 2.50.
Exhibition open 24 May - 22 June, Monday - Saturday, noon - 6pm, (open
noon - 8pm Thursdays), closed Sunday. Admission free.
White Space Gallery was started by Anya and Michael Stonelake in 1999.
Previous exhibitions include:
2001 Mitki: Losers Victorious.
2001 Vladimir Shinkarev: World Literature (also shown at the Cheltenham
Festival of Literature).
2001 Dmitry A Prigov: Phantom Installations
2002 ART 2002 Islington, London.
2002 'Approaching Holiness', Russian Orthodox Icon in the 21st Century.
White Space Gallery
The French Chocolate Factory, 51 Southwark St, SE1. Tube: London Bridge
0208 740 46 75 / 0207 407 53 88