The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Russian ‘Triennale’ striking in its diversity

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The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works fromacross Russia’s 11 time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.

Garage sent curators to gather works for the ambitious show aimed both at energizing the art scene at home and establishi­ng Russia abroad.

The exhibit by nearly 70 artists encompasse­s painting, sculpture, video, installati­on and conceptual works, mostly after 2012, and is a dizzying montage of the different cultures from within Russia’s borders.

Works by artists from Siberia, the Far East and Chechnya sit beside those from Moscow, with obvious difference­s.

And that’s exactly the point, said Dasha Zhukova, who along with her husband, tycoon Roman Abramovich, founded the Garage in 2008. The pair mingled with artists and Russia’s cultural elite in the sleek, modern gallery in Gorky Park.

Abramovich might still be close to the Kremlin, which keeps careful control of Russian culture, but Zhukova rejects a “singular vision,” saying she wants the Triennale to offer a platformfo­r different voices “to agree and disagree.”

Among the 68 artists with work on display through May 14 were some first-time exhibitors in Moscow; others are rising stars on a global scale.

Irina Korina’s massive installati­on, “The Tail Wags the Comet,” dominated the atrium. A labyrinth of stairs and walkways, dotted with tiny “shrines,” leads to a space hung with boiler suits, or a lighted chamber where people’s shadows inhabit a rocket-shaped window, seen from outside.

Trained as a theater designer, the 40-year-old Korina has exhibited in New York, London and Europe. She said her work is strongly linked to Russia.

“It is the reality around me, and this reality is my raw material,” she said.

For Taus Makhacheva, her native Dagestan exerts a strong pull and her work, “The Way of an Object” (2013), references its history with reimagined museum objects.

Makhacheva, 34, trained in London and exhibits in Europe but said she always ends up going back toDagestan’s thriving arts scene, despite violence from an Is- lamic insurgency in the region.

Aslan Gaimov said coming from Chechnya does not define him as an artist. His work, “Numbers,” arrayed house numbers from prewar Grozny across a wall.

He uses the history of Chechnya in his work, but told The Associated Press: “It’s about broader themes of what is history, memory, war.”

Svetlana Shuvaeva said she thinks of herself as an artist first and foremost — “a Russian, if you must, but also internatio­nal.”

“It doesn’t make any difference, just as the age of an artist doesn’t make any difference — an artist is an artist,” she said.

The Moscow-based Shuvaeva’s installati­on, “It’s OK to Change Your Mind” (2016-17), uses 150 painted canvases of images found in daily life to suggest an ornamental reality that conceals nothing underneath.

Roxana Marcoci, senior curator fromNewYor­k’sMuseum of Modern Art, said it’s a show full of energy and new discoverie­s.

The exhibit “maps Russia today as a place grounded in multiple cultures,” Marcoci said. It may be disjointed, uneven and possibly chaotic, she added, but art should be disruptive.

Is it disruptive enough to carve out its own place on the internatio­nal art stage?

“Russia is a very young place. It’s undiscover­ed territory,” said critic Arie AmayaAkker­mans, who points to the isolation of Soviet era art.

“There was a disconnect for a very long time, and only now it’s slowly catching up,” he said.

 ??  ?? In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, artist Irina Korina poses near her installati­on “The Tail Wags the Comet” at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, artist Irina Korina poses near her installati­on “The Tail Wags the Comet” at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
 ??  ?? Aalexandra Paperno speaks to the Associated Press at her work “Suspense” displayed at the contempora­ry art museum Garage “Triennale” in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, March 11, 2017. The exhibit by nearly 70artists encompasse­s painting, sculpture, video, installati­on and conceptual works, mostly after 2012, and is a dizzying montage of the different cultures from within Russia’s borders.
Aalexandra Paperno speaks to the Associated Press at her work “Suspense” displayed at the contempora­ry art museum Garage “Triennale” in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, March 11, 2017. The exhibit by nearly 70artists encompasse­s painting, sculpture, video, installati­on and conceptual works, mostly after 2012, and is a dizzying montage of the different cultures from within Russia’s borders.
 ??  ?? In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Sveta Shuvayeva’s work “It’s OK to Change Your Mind,” is displayed at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Sveta Shuvayeva’s work “It’s OK to Change Your Mind,” is displayed at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Ugo Rondione’s piece Our Magic Hour is displayed in front of the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art at the Triennale in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Ugo Rondione’s piece Our Magic Hour is displayed in front of the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art at the Triennale in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
 ??  ?? In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Vladimir Archipov’s installati­on “Gennady’s bath-bed” is on display at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, Vladimir Archipov’s installati­on “Gennady’s bath-bed” is on display at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
 ??  ?? In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, artist Dmitry Bulatov, left, speaks at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11 time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.
In this photo taken on Thursday, March 9, 2017, artist Dmitry Bulatov, left, speaks at the Triennale in the Garage museum of Contempora­ry Art in Moscow, Russia. The contempora­ry art museum Garage opened its first “Triennale” on Friday with works from across Russia’s 11 time zones, and they were striking in their diversity — perhaps surprising­ly in today’s political context.

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