CCC Garage Center for Contemporary Culture
Moscow
9/45 Krymsky Val st.
+7 (0495) 6450520 FAX +7 (0495) 2760302
WEB
Two exhibitions
dal 20/6/2013 al 24/8/2013

Segnalato da

Zach Feuer Gallery



 
calendario eventi  :: 




20/6/2013

Two exhibitions

CCC Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow

The Black Pot, Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg's latest project, takes the shape of a circular panorama where symbols of universal creation take on a very personal and poetic note. 'Jan Svankmajer's Kunstkammer' gains cohesion within the concept of the Kunstkammer, or cabinet of curiosities, an eclectic collection of peculiar man-made and organic objects.


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Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg
The Black Pot

Garage Center for Contemporary Culture presents The Black Pot, a new project by Swedish artists Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg, curated by Yulia Aksenova.

Djurberg is best known for her provocative films using stop-motion animation. In these works, plasticine figures enact absurd stories, in scenes evocative of nightmares and morbid fantasies. The characters she creates personify some of the darkest aspects of human nature—the pleasure found in cruelty, as well as fear, sexual obsession and the lure of violence.

Although her visual language draws upon the aesthetics of childhood, Djurberg's work avoids sentimentality and instead explores subconscious and taboo desires.

A degree of allegory is characteristic of her work, particularly through her use of archaic forms of narrative, such as the fable and myth, ¬which are traditionally used to represent core archetypes of human behavior and their more extreme manifestations.

The Black Pot—Djurberg and Berg’s latest project—differs greatly from previous works insofar as the film does not contain scenes of violence, graphic sexual imagery or extreme physiological states. Instead, a certain poetic and metaphorical abstraction emerges within the fragmented narrative. Drawing on classical mythology, Djurberg plays with the subject of ontogenesis (the transformation of an organism from an egg to a mature form). The Black Pot, like all the films by the artist, is accompanied by the eccentric and hypnotic music of Hans Berg.

The central video installation takes the shape of a circular panorama where symbols of universal creation take on a very personal and poetic note. As in a bubbling pot, sublime and earthy senses mix in the dark space of the universe. The exhibition also features new work by the artist, including sculptural seats that take the shape of everyday items, such as donuts or scrambled eggs. These are formally united in a circle—the primary symbol of the creation of the world.

Kindly supported by Embassy of Sweden in Russia.

Nathalie Djurberg
Born in Lysekil, Sweden in 1978, Nathalie Djurberg received her master's degree from Malmö Art Academy in 2002. Since then, her work has been exhibited widely in solo and group exhibitions around the world, most notably at the New Museum, New York; the Pompidou Centre, Paris; the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles and Fondazione Prada, Milan. Djurberg’s works are also represented in the collections of the Malmö Konstmuseum; The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. In 2007, Djurberg was awarded the Carnegie Art Award, and in 2009, her installation Experiment earned her the Silver Lion for Promising Young Artist at the Venice Biennale. She currently lives and works in Rattvik, Sweden with her artistic collaborator Hans Berg.

Hans Berg
Hans Berg was born in Rättvik, Sweden in 1978. He is a musician, producer and composer, working mainly with techno and house musical styles. After meeting Djurberg in Berlin in 2004, all of the artist’s video works and installations have been accompanied by Berg’s musical arrangements. Berg regularly gives live concerts and has performed at Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm; the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam; Art Parcours, Art Basel, Switzerland and the Pompidou Centre, Paris.

Yulia Aksenova
Yulia Aksenova studied History of Art and Curating Contemporary Art at the Russian State University of the Humanities (1998 – 2002) and attended the Programme of New Art Strategy for Artists and Art Critics at the Soros Center for Contemporary Art (2000 – 2002). She later attended the International Curatorial Training Program de Appel in Amsterdam in 2007. Aksenova has held curatorial positions at the State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow Center of Art and Garage Center for Contemporary Culture. She has curated and co-curated numerous exhibitions over the last five years, including Russian Pop-art (2005) and Sots-Art: Political art in Russia (2007) at the Moscow State Tretyakov Gallery; numerous exhibitions at the Moscow Center of Art; Masters Hamfrey`s Clock, De Appel, Amsterdam (2008); New Old Cold War, Red October Gallery (2009); and Russian Utopias (2010), Phantom Monuments (2011) and Necessary Art, Gorky Park (2011) at Garage.

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Jan Švankmajer’s Kunstkammer

Garage Center for Contemporary Culture presents an exhibition by legendary Czech artist, filmmaker and set designer Jan Švankmajer, widely recognized as one of the most accomplished animators working today. Švankmajer has received international acclaim for his films, which merge live action, stop-motion animation and puppetry to create scenes that simultaneously shock and captivate the viewer. His work explores the legacy of Surrealism, and the way in which images derived from the subconscious can reveal both the inner workings of the human mind and its social surroundings, thereby confronting the dark and often frightening sides of our existence.

Švankmajer’s artistic practice is incredibly wide-ranging. Aside from his feature films and animation, he produces sculpture, graphic design, collage and “tactile experiments”. The artist uses both man-made and organic materials, such as animal skeletons, stones, fossils and dried plants.

Curated by Yulia Aksenova, the exhibition at Garage reveals the rich diversity of Švankmajer’s practice. The work gains cohesion within the concept of the Kunstkammer, or cabinet of curiosities, an eclectic collection of peculiar man-made and organic objects. The first Kunstkammern, created during the Age of Enlightenment during the 17th and 18th centuries, epitomized the influx of new knowledge from non-Western civilizations and were perceived as a sort of arena, a theater of the world, where art and nature collide.

Švankmajer’s sculptures and short films will be presented as part of a large-scale architectural installation – designed by Kiril Ass and Nadezhda Korbut - created especially for the exhibition at Garage. The artist’s installation and arrangement of the space aims to immerse the viewer in the phantasmagoria of Švankmajer’s art and his world, thereby offering the viewer a completely unique insight into his practice.

Jan Švankmajer
Jan Švankmajer was born in Prague in 1934. In the 1950s, he studied at The Theatre Faculty of the Prague Academy of Performing Arts, where he majored in Puppet Set Design and Production. Švankmajer continued to work as an artist and filmmaker in Prague, founding the Theater of Masks in the city’s Semaphore Theater and taking a leading role in the Czech Surrealist Commune. His works have been exhibited internationally at the Laforet Museum Harajuku, Tokyo; Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna; the Kyoto National Museum and the Museum of the Moving Image, New York; with a major retrospective of the artist's work recently held at the City Gallery, Prague. Švankmajer has made over thirty short films and animations and six feature films, for which he has received critical acclaim and won numerous international awards.

Yulia Aksenova
Yulia Aksenova studied History of Art and Curating Contemporary Art at the Russian State University of the Humanities (1998 – 2002) and attended the Programme of New Art Strategy for Artists and Art Critics at the Soros Center for Contemporary Art (2000 – 2002). She later attended the International Curatorial Training Program de Appel in Amsterdam in 2007. Aksenova has held curatorial positions at the State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow Center of Art and Garage Center for Contemporary Culture. She has curated and co-curated numerous exhibitions over the last five years, including Russian Pop-art (2005) and Sots-Art: Political art in Russia (2007) at the Moscow State Tretyakov Gallery; numerous exhibitions at the Moscow Center of Art; Masters Hamfrey`s Clock, De Appel, Amsterdam (2008); New Old Cold War, Red October Gallery (2009); and Russian Utopias (2010), Phantom Monuments (2011) and Necessary Art, Gorky Park (2011) at Garage.

Press contact:
Daria Kotova PR manager +7 (495) 645-05-20 pr@garageccc.com

Garage Center for Contemporary Culture office
9/45 Krymsky Val st., 119049, Moscow, Russia
Hours
11:00 - 22:00
Opening hours are subject to change due to special events.
Admission fee 200

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