Last week, as every year, hundred art galleries in Zurich welcomed the new season of exhibitions. For three days and shifts divided by geographical proximity were opened up later, which is unusual in a city that everything closes early.
exhibitions this season, which lasts until September and October are very diverse, some interesting, some less creative and imaginative. Among the must-see, are, for example, two related to Russian art, especially that of Valery Yurlov, which rarely have the opportunity to access abroad. The second sample Suprematism, which inspired by the Russian Avant-garde is that of Zaha Hadid (Baghdad, 1950), the acclaimed Iraqi architect and the first woman to win the Pritzker Prize, the highest award in the field of architecture equivalent to the Nobel (top photo 1) . With the exhibition, the Gallery Gmurzynska to , located in the heart of the financial district of Zurich, went through a transformation that matches the work spaces and (photo 2 ) the same ones that have their origin in the Russian artists Ilya Chashnik, El Lissitzky, Kasimir Malevich, Alexander Rodchenko and Suetin Nikolai. Valery Yurlov - Diary of an artist
The Gallery Nadja Brykina Di exposes the Aryan a contractor ar Valery Yurlov (Kazakstan, 1932), with drawings, engravings, paintings and other objects, and an illustrated catalog. Yurlov (in photos 3 and 5 during the presentation of the sample) was born in Alma-Ata, one of the major cities of Kazakhstan. At 16 he went to live with his family in Moscow. It is considered a great conceptualist and maverick of Russian art in the second half of the twentieth century.
In the decade that originated in Russia was born, under pressure from Stalin, the art 'official' Socialist Realism, which had to be 'understandable' for the people. The maverick who wanted to live with artistic freedom were persecuted, imprisoned and depressed. Thus arose a parallel world that only worked on the underground and talk to each other as they could, and under great risk and fear of being discovered.
Brykina Zurich gallery is dedicated to promoting Russian art of the second half of the twentieth century to date. In his spacious exhibits its permanent collection of Russian artists known as the maverick among those found Igor Vulokh, Alexei Kamensky, Vladimir Andreenkov Boris Otarov, Krunov Mikhail, Zlotnikov Yuri, Vladimir and Andrey Soskiev Krasulin.
0 comments:
Post a Comment