Rosphoto State Russian Center for Photography
St. Petersburg
Ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35
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Eliska Bartek
dal 29/7/2009 al 5/9/2009

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Eliska Bartek



 
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29/7/2009

Eliska Bartek

Rosphoto State Russian Center for Photography, St. Petersburg

The artist has come to be increasingly interested in the subconscious and the mystic, the sense that there is another reality behind pictures, that remains unshown. It is this unshown reality that Bartek focuses on in her recent work, as in this 2008 series of black and white photographs. In her photograms, she opens a both critical and sensuous dialogue with the erotic objects and toys that she arranges surrealistically.


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Erratic Photography
The artist has come to be increasingly interested in the subconscious and the mystic, the sense that there is another reality behind pictures, that remains unshown. It is this unshown reality that Eliška Bartek focuses on in her recent work, as in this 2008 series of black and white photographs. Created on a journey to Abu Dhabi, the series reveals both a hightened sensitivity for the void and a profound curiosity for orientation in an unknown culture. By working with time exposure and camera in motion, the artist succeeds to capture the fluid image of a megacity at the moments of departure and arrival on its airport.
She presents us with a sense of tension which builds up in transitional moments of arrival and departure, and which seems to correlate with the discrepancy between image and non-image, longing and disappointment, familiarity and estrangement, expectation and passiveness.
In Bartek's works, the high-tech architecture of the airport and the zeitgeist of flying for a higher game it represents, are revealed as ambitious facades which barely seem to conceal an abysmal potential of paradox and irrationalism. Bartek's erratic photography confronts us with unreal apparitions that seem to stand for the deeply human and universal quest for purpose and identity.
Bartek's pictures also convey the sense that this quest is bound to fail, once we lose contact with our historical roots or refuse to actively participate in our future. Ambition for its own sake, Bartek's photographs seem to hint, is as fragile as a house built on sand it can be blown away by history any time.
Gunther Dietrich

The artist's works relate to traditions in photography from her own country and abroad. She works in the spirit of Constructivist and Geometric Photography as well as Dada and Surrealism. Her pieces resemble Talbot's Photogenic Drawings - images of objects that were exposed to light on photosensitive paper, a technique frequently adopted by avant-garde artists in the inter-war period, such as Laszlo Mohly-Nagy and Christian Schad or Czechia's Jaromir Funke, František Drtikol, Jaroslav Rössler and Eugen Wikovský. These artists experimented with the effects of light, by placing objects and forms of different transparency on a photosensitive surface, which then was exposed to stable or movable light sources. Bartek's photographs also bring to mind experiments by late Polish artists: Antoni Mikolajczyk's Partytury Miast [Scores of Cities] from the 1980s, which show recordings of light waves and spatial situations; and also Henryk Stazewski's 9 strumieni kolorowego światła na niebie [9 streams of color light on the sky] (1970, Wrozlaw).
Both series share a fascination with the role of light in photography, appearing as a Demiurge giving form to the overwhelming world and its elements, thus creating artistic reality. They capture its characteristics - constant change, instability and momentariness. This light is not stopped by the surface of reality but reaches deeper, into materiality itself. Similarly our reception of Eliška Bartek's art does not end with simply enjoying the visual aspect.
Magda Durda-Dmitruk
Director of 5th Warsaw Festival of Art Photography 2009, Poland

Mirrors of desire and subjection
In her photograms, Eliška Bartek opens a both critical and sensuous artistic dialogue with the erotic objects and toys that she arranges surrealistically.
Her approach can be compared to a banning ritual: by visually exhausting moral and ethical thresholds, she provokes escalation between violence and lust, intimidation and desire, sexual subjection and emancipation. The aesthetics of her symbolism are narrative as well as vivid in their presentation of objects. Most aesthetically arranged in fragile conjunctions, Asian love balls or dildos appear like relics of sexual pleasure on a demonic family altar. They symbolize the magnetic attraction of the sexes, yet they are also fetishized substitutes for the sexual other. Presented in cross-faded negatives, these images gain the quality of indiscreet x-rays. They seem like subversive inner display windows of provocation or peep boxes of erotic fantasies and obsession. In an almost ritual synthesis of everyday-life and cultism, these objects imitate a ceremonial sacrifice, which is performed on a surreal family altar of desire.
Christina Wendenburg

The beautiful Mysteriousness of Eliška Barteks Blossoms
In what resembles a diabolic provocation, Eliška Bartek's fascinating photographs of orchids, hibiscus and magnolia blossoms seem illuminated by Bengal lights. They appear to be twisted together from angels' wings. Most important for the artist in her work with fresh flowers is the use of artificial light which provides a larger spectrum than sunlight and makes the specific objects glow three dimensionally on a stage setting. The artist relies completely on the analogue character of conventional photography and rejects the aid of computers.
Most of the flowers originated from a botanical garden in a small village in the district of Ticino, which lies in the Italian part of Switzerland. Eliška made her selection following strict artistic criteria: only the most sculptural looking specimens were cut for her by the owner himself. The fascinatingly lit images invite us to close-up investigation but also suggest distant panorama perspective, thus providing romanticism as well as its critique. The powerful interaction between the botanical and the artificial invokes exoticism and eroticism, beauty and danger. Nature is always one step ahead of culture - but these flowers are more: they are horribly beautiful, dangerous, melancholic and romantic.
These works tell the tale of Eliška Bartek's little garden of paradise, an eternally flowering place of delight.
by Christoph Tannert

The catalogue was kindly supported by Dr. Gerhard Pfister, Schwitzerland for the reproduced works by and by Dr. Stadthaus from the German Embassy's Cultural Department in St. Petersburg.

Special thanks to Dieter Fehlbaum, Johannes Kretzschmar, Christoph Tannert, Michael Schultz, Petra Schilcher, Roxana Pirovano, Gunther Dietrich, Magda Durda and to the friends and people who support me along my artistic way.

Many thanks to Mr. Zakhar Kolovsky, General - Director of State Russian Centre of Photography ROSPHOTO, St.Petersburg, Russia.

Until 31.08.2009

Old St.-Petersburg In the framework of ROSPHOTO exhibitions in the House of Cinema.
The State Russian Centre of Photography (ROSPHOTO) presents a version of «Old St.-Petersburg» with over twenty early XIX century photographs by well known European masters. Among the images are those created in "Boissonas&Eggler " studio (founded in 1902 by the Swiss Frederic Boissonas and German master Fritz Eggler) as well as those of Emile Huard.

Opening: 30 July - 6pm

Rosphoto State Russian Center for Photography
Ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35 St. Petersburg
daily 11-19

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