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SAVADOV Arsen |
Selected personal exhibitions
2007Selected group exhibitions
2009In the Ukraine, critics referred to this type of work as neo-Baroque. The Baroque is commonly associated with the Ukrainian artistic tradition - it came from Ukraine to Russia at the end of the eighteenth century. Even when Savadov and Senchenko moved away from painting towards inter¬active performance, video and other techniques and art forms typical of the 1990s, they continued to be influenced by the neo-Baroque imagination. In 1994 they curated a grandiose and provocative project, `Landscape of Cultural Revolution`. Their works were fenced off from the public, visible only through reversed binoculars attached to holes in the fence. This approach is characteristic of Savadov and Senchenko: on the one hand it explored the phenomenon of vision and its possibili¬ties, on the other, it reacted to the much-debated problem in Kiev at the time of the `crisis of representation".
In 1996, as part of Manifesta 1 at the Boijmans van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam, Savadov and Senchenko staged a project in the museum toilets. Short texts such as `To the smiles of kind people` and `To peace in the whole world` appeared on the tiles above toilets, urinals and sinks. While entering into the critique of institutionalism characteristic of the period, they preserved their Baroque temperament.In their most recent work, Savadov and Senchenko have returned to representative art in the form of photography. As in their early pieces, they display visual over-abundance, erotic provocation and sophisticated referentiality. However, this time their work is not an apology for artistic autonomy but a project of social research. It is a response to the collapse of symbolic order prevalent in post-Communist societies, and to the disintegration of the contemporary subject. In these photo-graphic images diverse symbolic codes collide: nouw.uu riche glamour and national mythology, neo-decadent eroticism and fragments of the grand style of Stalinist culture. Importantly, by using the stylistics of contemporary commercial photography, these pictures are designed for the present - appearing on the pages of fashionable magazines. Editors accept these works with enthusiasm. Rather like the Soviet censors who allowed Savadov and Senchenko`s canvases into official exhibitions, they vaguely understand that these are phenomena of a different order.
Viktor MisianoRequest
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