Forums

Site map
Search
0The virtual community for English-speaking expats and Russians
  Main page   Make it home    Expat list   Our partners     About the site   FAQ
Please log in:
login:
password:
To register  Forgotten your password?   
  Survival Guide   Calendars
  Phone Directory   Dining Out
  Employment   Going Out
  Real Estate   Children
   Friday
   March 29
Culture Picks
Culture Reviews
TV Listings
 Exhibitions
 Film
Arts Calendar / February 6 / Exhibitions
Alexander Rodchenko. Experiments for the Future. On the 125th anniversary of his birth
The Russian avant-garde of the twentieth century is a unique phenomenon not only in Russian, but in world culture. The amazing creative energy accumulated by the artists of this great age is still providing nourishment for artistic culture today and all who have dealings with the art produced by Russian Art Nouveau. Alexander Rodchenko was indisputably one of the main generators of creative ideas and the general spiritual aura of the age. Painting, design, theatre, cinema, typography and photography, all areas invaded by the powerful talent of this strong, handsome man, were transformed, opening up radically new paths of development. The early 1920s was an «intermediate age», to quote Viktor Shklovsky, one of the finest critics and theoreticians of the day, a period when, albeit briefly, illusively, there was a resonance between artistic and social experiment. It was at this time, 1924, that photography was invaded by Alexander Rodchenko, already a well-known artist with the slogan «Our duty is to experiment» placed firmly at the centre of his aesthetic. The result of this invasion was a fundamental change of ideas about the nature of photography and the role of the photographer. Conceptual thinking was introduced into photography. Instead of just being the reflection of reality, photography also became a device for the visual representation of dynamic intellectual constructions. Until 12.02.17
Multimedia Art Museum 
Philippe Chancel. Rebels’ Paris 1982
Over the past twenty years Philippe Chancel’s photography has explored the complex, shifting and fertile territory where art, documentaries and journalism meet. His is a constantly evolving project, focusing on the status of images when they are confronted with what constitutes “images” in the contemporary world. Born in 1959, Philippe Chancel now works and lives in Paris. He was introduced to photography at a very young age, took an economics degree at the University of Paris (Nanterre) followed by a post-graduate diploma in journalism in Paris. Philippe Chancel’s work has been widely exhibited and published in France and abroad in a number of prestigious publications. These include "Regards d’artistes" – portraits of contemporary artists, "Souvenirs" – a series of portraits of great capital cities (Paris, London, New York, Tokyo, Brussels) glimpsed through shop windows - produced in collaboration with Valérie Weill, and, lastly, his North Korean project, which brought him international recognition. Philippe Chancel is currently working on a new long-term project entitled « Datazone » that aims to explore the many-faceted aftermaths within the documentary field, revealing some of the world’s most singular lands which are recurrently in the news or, conversely, hardly ever picked up by the media radar. This visionary quest has already taken him from Port au Prince to Kabul via Fukushima, Niger's delta, Pyongyang or Astana. His work is included in many permanent public collections as well as private collections. Untill 26.11.17
Moscow Museum of Modern Art  
Roma Aeterna. Masterpieces of the Vatican Pinacotheca
The Tretyakov Gallery presents the masterpieces from the permanent exhibition of the Pinacotheca, which attracts art lovers from around the world. The treasures of the Vatican Museums rarely leave their walls, so that the exhibition will be an event not only for Russia and Europe, but also for the whole world. The exhibition will show the works of XII to XVIII centuries, including the paintings by Raphael, Caravaggio, Bellini, Guercino, Perugino, Poussin, Reni. The exhibition aims to show the development of European thought and art from the middle Ages to the Enlightenment, to recall the spiritual connection of Moscow and Rome through the masterpieces of the Vatican picture gallery. In the opinion of exhibition's curator Arkady Ippolitov, "the main idea of the Vatican museums is the idea of Rome." Roma Aeterna (Eternal Rome) is "not just a city, not just the capital but the whole of European history and quitessence European spirit". The main hall of the exhibition is planned on the model of St. Peter's square. The exposition begins with icons of the 12th century "The Blessing Christ", which is close to the Russian samples and recalls the common source of Orthodoxy and Catholicism. Besides showcasing the wonderful paintings the curators have planned a retrospective of Italian films, lectures and musical programs. Until 19.02.17
Tretyakov Gallery at Lavrushinsky Lane 
The Geogian Avant-garde: 1900–1930s.
For the first time in Russia, The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts presents such an extensive exhibition of artworks by Georgian artists of the first third of the 20th century. Visitors will be able to see works by Niko Pirosmanashvili (Pirosmani) (1863–1918), Vladimir (Lado) Gudiashvili (1896–1980), David Kakabadze (1889–1952), Kirill Zdanevich (1892–1969), Alexander Bazhbeuk-Melikov (Melikyan) (1891–1966), Elene Akhvlediani (1901–1975), Irakli Gamrekeli (1894–1943), Petre Otskheli (1907–1937), and Zygmunt Waliszewski (1897–1936). The exhibition will present 200 paintings, easel drawings and theatrical decorations from major Russian and Georgian museums and private collections. The project is meant to emphasize the importance of dialogue between the two countries whose history and culture have been inextricably linked over centuries. Georgia, particularly Tiflis, were the point of intersection of different civilizations, languages and traditions. The exhibition is focused around the idea of displaying the rich artistic legacy of the Georgian art of the Avant-garde period. In the early 20th century, Georgian painting, literature, music and theatre were under a considerable influence of the Avant-garde thought. Tiflis became ‘little Paris’, the center of an artistic experiment. The city had an eventful cultural life: artistic cafés organized numerous poetic tournaments; Kote Marjanishvili, stage director of the Moscow Art Theatre and founder of the Free Theater in Moscow, collaborated with young artists in Georgia – Petre Otskheli and Irakli Gamrekeli. Tiflis was the place where Vladimir Mayakovsky and Osip Mandestam performed, the place that became home for the poets Vasily Kamensky and Aleksei Kruchenykh. The Conservatory of Tiflis had Heinrich Neuhaus among its professors. Here the philosopher George Gurdjieff established the first Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man and the School of Collective Gymnastics where everyone could enroll to study "sacred dances" and "sacred gymnastics". Until 12.03.17
Pushkin State Musem of Fine Arts. Private Collections 
Voices of André Malraux’s Imaginary Museum
This exhibition, dedicated to French novelist, art theorist and Minister of Cultural Affairs Andre Malraux (1901-76) and his concept of the Imaginary Museum, features items from major Russian and European museums. In his books, The Voices of Silence and The Metamorphosis of the Gods which are his two major works in the field, he thinking about the role of the art museum and his concept of the musée imaginaire – often translated as “the museum without walls” or simply “the imaginary museum”. For us today, Malraux argues, the art museum is central to our understanding of, and our response to, those objects we regard as works of art, irrespective of their cultural origin. Now, the specific style of an artist is revealed most clearly and most powerfully, Malraux argues, when confronted with other works of art, and the art museum is one of the key places in which such confrontations are made possible. This response to art – this impulse to confront styles one with another – is, Malraux reminds us, very much a modern phenomenon, one that would not have been understood before the era of the art museum. “In the seventeenth century,” he writes, “a Sung painting would not have been compared with a work by Poussin: that would have meant comparing a ‘strange-looking’ landscape with a noble work of art.” That is, it would have meant comparing things that could not properly be compared – things of different kinds. But for us today, these two works belong to the same world – the world of art – and our response places them on the same footing, and sees them both as works of art – simply works in different styles. In short, whether we’re speaking about painting, sculpture, or other forms of visual art, we today instinctively tend to establish a dialogue between different works, and whether we’re conscious of it or not, it’s through this dialogue that each work comes most fully to life. Untill 12.02.17
Pushkin Fine Arts Museum 
Yasumasa Morimura. The History of the Self-Portrait
The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts presents a solo exhibition of the contemporary Japanese artist Yasumasa Morimura. The show is dedicated to the history of self-portrait in the world art. The display will present over 80 pieces from the collection of The National Museum of Art (Osaka), Hara Museum of Contemporary Art (Tokyo), The National Museum of Modern Art (Kyoto), and from the collection of the artist. The exhibition consist of several sections: the first one entitled “When I Didn’t Know Anything about Art History” includes photographs from the artist’s personal archive, two early pieces of 1985 – “Portrait. Van Gogh” and “Portrait. Camille Roulin”, and a large-scale multi-figured composition “A Sympósion on Self-Portraits” representing many characters of his transformations. The second section called “Self-Portraits through Art History” displays works created in 2016: portraits of Leonardo da Vinci, Dürer, van Eyck, Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Courbet, Böcklin, Ensor, van Gogh, Rousseau, Magritte, and Dalí. Along with the artistic interpretation of the characters, the titles given by the artist are a fundamental part of the creative idea. The section “An Inner Dialogue with Frida Kahlo” is entirely dedicated to the Mexican artist. Another room will be exploring “Las Meninas” – a painting by Diego Velasquez, renowned Spanish artist of the 17th century. In the “The 20th Century – An Age of Self-Portraits” section the viewers will see original interpretations of works by Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol, and Cindy Sherman. Yasumasa Morimura was born in Osaka (Japan) in 1951. He entered the international art scene in the early 1980s. In his first photographic works, he transformed himself into personalities of contemporary pop culture and artists of various periods. Morimura acts as both model and concept creator. During his career, he has invented over 300 different characters. Today, Yasumasa Morimura is considered the most well-known Japanese artist working with the appropriation genre. Until 09.04.17
Pushkin State Musem of Fine Arts. European and American Art  
March
29 30
31
April
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Copyright © The Moscow Expat Site, 1999-2024Editor  Sales  Webmaster +7 (903) 722-38-02