Travel

An oligarch’s museum to the Giardini: Where to find Russian art in Venice

Russian Pavilion: The Giardini

Until Nov. 26

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Grisha Bruskin

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Grisha Bruskin

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Grisha Bruskin

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Grisha Bruskin

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Grisha Bruskin

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Recycle Group

Courtesy of the artist and the Russian Pavilion

Installation by Recycle Group

The Russian Pavilion at the 57th Venice Biennale in the Giardini Gardens is very interesting this  year. A new commissioner means that the rules are new too. Semyon Mikhailovsky, who this year took over the post of commissioner from Stella Kesaeva, has invited as many as three artists to take part – Grisha Bruskin, the Recycle Group, and Sasha Pirogova, as well as three composers – Dmitri Kourliandski (Dmitry Kurlandsky), Peter Aidu, and Konstantin Dudakov-Kashuro, who have written music for the Russian show, which is titled Theatrum Orbis. And even though each of the artists had their own curator, the result is an all-in-one and coherent show. The exhibition invites the viewer to experience an apocalyptic world in the multi-figure sculptural installation of renowned Grisha Bruskin; then to plunge into the digital Dantesque Hell of the Recycle Group (the Blocked Content installation contains sculptures that can only be seen on the “thermal imager” screen of a smartphone via a special program); and finally to experience enlightenment and rebirth in the melancholy video of Sasha Pirogova.

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys: Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Until Sept. 5

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Olga Shishko, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Marina Loshak

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

Alan Vouba

Man as Bird. Images of Journeys. / Palazzo Soranzo Van Axel

This is the first international show in the programme Pushkin Museum XXI put on by the famous Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow. Its aim is to broaden the activities of a traditional museum – the Pushkin is famous for its collection of Impressionists and Old Masters – by entering the field of contemporary art. Through multimedia works by 14 artists from Russia and other countries, the exhibition sends the viewer on a journey through the waves of memory. Here you can stand under the huge Moon of Leonid Tishkov, which has already travelled to various countries of the world, “ride” on a ghost ship in the video installation of Tanya Akhmetgalieva, or experience the “vibrating universe” in the sound sculpture of Yuri Kalendarev.

Space Force Construction: Palazzo delle Zattere

Until Aug. 25

Delfino Sisto Legnani

Aleksandr Rodchenko. Workers’ Club, International Exposition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts, Paris 1925 replica constructed 2017 Wood

Courtesy the artist

Kirill Gluschenko. Venets 2017 Installation: objects, book, postcards

Delfino Sisto Legnani

Installation. View, Space Force Construction Including Liubov’ Popova, Spatial Force Construction, 1921, Oil on plywood, State Tretyakov Gallery Photo

Delfino Sisto Legnani

Melvin Edwards. Corner for Ana 1970/2017 Barbed wire Courtesy of the artist and Alexander Gray Associates, New York Installation View, Space Force Construction

V-A-C Foundation

El Lissitzky. Room for Constructive Art, Internationale Kunstausstellung (International Art Exhibition), Dresden 1926 replica constructed 2017 Painted wood, metal, and fabric Produced by V-A-C Foundation

Courtesy the artist, Sprüth Magers and Mary Boone Gallery

Barbara Kruger. Untitled (Surrounded) 2017 Printed vinyl

Delfino Sisto Legnani

Irina Korina. The Hall of Columns 2017 Installation (metal, wood, trees, mirrors, plastic, textile, paper, and acrylic paint) Produced by V-A-C Foundation Installation View, Space Force Construction

Sergey Sapozhnikov

Sergey Sapozhnikov. Dance 2017 Commissioned by V-A-C Foundation

The V-A-C Foundation, owned by Russian oligarch Leonid Mikhelson, opened its permanent exhibition space in Venice at the Palazzo delle Zattere during the last biennale but only now is it presenting its first full-fledged exhibition after the renovation of the building. In addition to billionaire friends of the owner, President of the Venice Biennale Paolo Baratta attended the opening.

The exhibition Space Force Construction is a subtle interaction – in the style of all of the foundation’s exhibitions – between old and new art. “Oh, it’s about the Russian Revolution!” is the most popular remark made by visitors greeted by the sight of a statue of revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin in the lobby. Indeed, the artists of post-revolutionary Russia – from El Lissitzky and Mayakovsky to Rodchenko and Deineka – are responsible for the “old” art here. It is they who created images of the new state and influenced and continue to influence the development of art not only in post-Soviet space but also in the West. And the representatives of the “new” art here are Irina Korina, a participant in the main biennale show, Chinese artist Cao Fei, renowned American artist Barbara Kruger, and many other artists from around the world who have been inspired by images to do with revolution.

We Have Never Stopped Building Utopia: Ca’ Foscari

Until July 29

Valery Koshlyakov

We Have Never Stopped Building Utopia

Valery Koshlyakov

We Have Never Stopped Building Utopia

Valery Koshlyakov

We Have Never Stopped Building Utopia

The exhibition of Valery Koshlyakov, already a renowned figure in contemporary art, at Ca’ Foscari is a continuation of sorts of his major show at the Moscow Museum of Russian Impressionism. In Moscow, the exhibition, in the autumn of 2016, occupied four museum floors. In Venice, the scale is much smaller, but here the magical glow of Koshlyakov’s architectural paintings is reinforced by the medieval walls of the palazzo on the Grand Canal.

The artist launched his career in the 1990s and earned recognition thanks to his unique technique – he paints landscapes of ancient ruins and Soviet architectural heritage on huge sheets of corrugated cardboard, integrating symbols of modernity.

The three-dimensional effect and the scale of his works have been appreciated not just in Russia. Koshlyakov has also held exhibitions at the MACRO museum in Rome, while the Pompidou Center in Paris holds examples of his work.

His works on cardboard, as well as canvases dedicated to Italian architecture, will be on view in Venice until July 29.

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