Archive for the ‘persona’ Category

Ivan Bazak at CCA

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Center for Contemporary Art at NaUKMA currently holds a very interesting show by Ivan Bazak. The show comprises of pictures, several videos, painting and cardboard sculptures, all under the name of “Where is my home? Where are you at home?” and it’s about the Ukrainian community in Italy. Overall, the installation leaved us in a satisfied and contemplative mood. It’s European quality installation art, done by a Ukrainian, alas, living abroad.

ivan bazak, cca, installation, kyiv ivan bazak, cca, installation, kyiv

Photo from What’s On

Igor Melnychuk - artist profile

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Last night together with MindtheGap and the other good friends Igor Melnychuk studio. Igor is a professor at the Kyiv Academy of Art, widely exhibited and sold all over Ukraine and abroad. His main interest is Hutzul culture, and the paintings tell that: mountains and bucolic huts on his landscapes, ethnically dressed hutzuls. He spends most of his summers in the Carpathians with his students on plain air and scavenging for local antiques.Brings in the business to the villagers who model sometimes for weeks for a painting. He defines his technique as impressionism: achieving maximum effect with minimum strokes. Here are some of his works (mostly they are in very large format):

igor melnychuk, studio visit, ukrainian art igor melnychuk, studio visit, ukrainian painter

Svitlana Pyrkalo - the Ukrainian Helen Fielding

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

Over the holidays got around to reading a very noteworthy book in Ukrainian: Svitlana Prykalo’s “Zelena Margaryta” (Green Margarita). Here’s a review by Vydnokola magazine:

“An extravagant cocktail with a Ukrainian scent” - these are the words Liudmyla Vynohorodska uses to describe her impressions on reading recently released Svitlana Pyrkalo’s Green Margarita. According to the author, Ukrainian fiction of the latest decades, or, more precisely - Ukrainian post-colonial fiction, pinpoints its own crisis and in many respects inadequacy. A traditional plot once seen as a perfect sample one now appears to be exhausted, over-elaborated, or loaded with too much straightforward propaganda issues. As Vynohorodska tries to show, Pyrkalo’s prose is somewhat different. It’s a try to represent the author’s ’self’ through the mirror of her principal female character - Marina Pohribna; a fragmented mix (or cocktail) of other people’s words and conversations, images of friends, recollections of parties, events and even insults. In other words, it’s a representation of everyday life of a woman in the post-colonial society with a scope of all-too-familiar questions: money and language, family relations and friendships, employment, accommodation, emigration and so forth. Thus, this remarkable display of life situations and attitudes reflects an overall Pyrkalo’s message, her inner deep concern with gender issues, - argues Vynohorodska.

I really relate to her light and funny style and very proud to note she is a frined of a friend. Some call her Ukrainian Helen Fielding (”Bridgit Jones Diary”). Same description can be applied to her follow up novel “Ne Dumai pro Chervone” (”Don’t Think of Red”). Now Svitlana works at the Ukrainian BBC service in London. Sorry to say there are no translations of her novels into English just yet.

Petro Sobko - artist profile

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

When in Lutsk last week, I saw this exhibit by Petro Sobko at our only art gallery in town. The guy has like 60 years of painting experience and makes amazing portraits (he offered me to sit for one, xixi). His most interesting work dates back to the 60s when we produced these huge Soviet propaganda canvases of milkmaids, trumpeters and construction workers. I got his number and his studio address if any of you would be curious to see this in person.

Petro Sobko portrait, Lusk artist

Petro Sobko portrait, Lusk artist

Vlada Ralko - artrist profile

Saturday, December 1st, 2007

Vlada Ralko, ukranian artist

Vlada Ralko, Pink Fortified

I saw one of her works a while ago, and now she has a solo exhibit going on at the Ya Gallery.

You can tell the artistic search for personal style in the span of seven years in these three paintings by Vlada . The last picture (from current show) is alreay way over my head in angst and symbolism, but I really enjoy to watch her progress.

pictures from Proza, Time out. ua and Art of Ukraine websites.

Ya Gallery, 55/57 Voloska st, in Podil

Atmasfera in the Battle of the Bands

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

atmasfera, a band from Ukraine to play in the battle of the bands in London

We just got a word from Andriy (in sunshades on the pic) that our favoarite Ukrainian band has won the 2007 Battle of the Bands qualifiers in Ukraine to go to London for the final show on Dec. 4-6. We are very happy for the guys and expect this to turn into a sweet record deal! :)

Dakha Brakha - the band

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

embroided Ukrainian shirt, perfomance by Dakha Brakha in Maidan club, Lutsk, UkraineLast night I really enjoyed a perfomance by Dakha Brakha - an ento chaos band that usually accompanies perfomances at Dakh - the Centre for Contemporary Art. The guys got great reviews in the British media for their Barbican premiere of Macbeth last year.

One can really get into it only by experiencing their music first-hand - get the energy from the lovely folk tunes and energetic beat. Check out the pictures from the show here (first few shots in the set).

Highly reccomend checking out the Dakh shows (the bill is updated regularly on their site in English) . Mind half of their shows are text free, so you don’t have to understand Ukrainian or Russian to go there.

Kiev, Bolshaya Vasilkovskaya str., 136 (Libidskaya metro)

Olena Kamenetska-Ostapchuk - artist profile

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

During our last visit to Lviv I came across Olena’s show at the Green Sofa gallery. It was mostly paintings of her cat, prosaic, you’ll say, but the way she does it… Looking back I kind of compare her freshness of subject matter with Sasha Makarska. She is much more mature though, well-respected by the art critics, established in the Lviv art scene and yet to be discovered by the Kyiv buyers. Therefore her monumental pieces go for around $1,000.

Checking with her earlier works I found an amazing series of Lviv backyard landscapes. The light in them grabs your attention the most. I put out here every picture I could get my hands on from those series:

olena kamentetska painting from the ukrainian artist in Lviv

Nikifor Dobchynskyi

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

More baby faces in the Kyiv art scene these days: this tongue-in-cheek show at the Zeh gallery resembles all too much Fernando Botero style, more so - the local Gapchinska. The author Nikifor Dobchynskyi purposefully using the style to emphasize the new Ukrainians’ lifestyle cliches.

I took all the pics from the zeh website.

nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine nikifor dobchynskyi at zeh gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine

Alexey Apollonov - artist profile

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

(Olexiy Appolonov) I wrote about him in my first gallery crawl post. At the time he had a personal exhibit at the Tryptyh gallery. This weekend we were going to a good friends’ wedding in Italy and we had to pick up a present in Kyiv at the last moment. Even though RA gallery usually carries higher-priced pieces, the owner Andriy Trilisky found for me in the back room this very lovely pastel by Apollonov. While carrying it on the plane I became so fond of it, it was hard to give it away to the dear newlyweds Fede and Michaela :).