The National - News

AN ARTIST’S HOPEFUL SERIES CREATED IN ISOLATION

▶ Olga Fedorova has spent her time at home working on a diary project as an outlet for her emotions during the pandemic, writes Razmig Bedirian

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It’s been sort of like Groundhog Day for more than two months now. Almost a season has gone by, and most of us have got used to carrying out our routines within the few square metres of our homes, while trying to ignore the fact the days are mixing together like water in water.

In her collage Days, Olga Fedorova – a Saint Petersburg-born artist who lives in Abu Dhabi – has managed to visually encapsulat­e this feeling of living across interchang­eable days. The collage shows a monochrome photograph of her head layered on a consistent coral backdrop.

She has a hook attached to her lip, and her face is concealed behind a school of indistingu­ishable fish.

The collage, she says, is symbolic of how time has been moving by in the past few months. “Everything is passing by like a shoal of identical fish,” Fedorova tells The National. “It’s so easy to be drawn into that routine and start feeling depressed. But there is always a way to keep your chin up. There is a way to find something special in each day.”

Fedorova’s Days is part of her Quarantine Diary collage series. The project, she says, was “born spontaneou­sly” and became both an outlet for, and a reflection of the emotions she was experienci­ng during the lockdown.

Fedorova began working on Quarantine Diary in the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Fedorova posts a new artwork on her Instagram account every day, and there are now more than 50 artworks in the series.

When the pandemic broke out, Fedorova – who works as a food and advertisin­g photograph­er – had to cancel all her scheduled photoshoot­s. Her two children, aged 6 and 9, continued their studies from home.

Her husband, who had travelled to Saudi Arabia for work, is stuck in the neighbouri­ng country.

“Under these circumstan­ces I was feeling I needed to make something to picture what’s going on in my life. Especially since I think my experience­s are common to what many families around the world are going through.”

With degrees in both photograph­y and graphic design, Fedorova sought to combine the two discipline­s in her

Quarantine Diary project. “I started combining photograph­s with graphics, merging the real and surreal,” she says. “I’m a fan of Minimalism. I’m not using a lot of colours or complicate­d forms in the collages, so the idea I’m plotting in my artwork can be easily understood.”

Fedorova says that while her collages are helping her stay hopeful about the future, they are also a way for her to collaborat­e creatively with her children, and the family dog, Betsy.

Her collage Life shows her daughter sitting on a tidal wave with Betsy beside her, both of them stare up at the enormous mauve jellyfish that Fedorova’s son is flying in the olive-green sky like a kite.

“I’m a big optimist, and the colourful themes in the works aim to support others with positive vibes,” she says.

“All the pictures for this project are being taken at home, with my kids, dog and myself as models.”

However, it’s not always easy

for Fedorova to convince her children to stay still for a photograph. She says she has to clearly express how she’d like her children to pose for the pictures, and which emotion they need to present.

“They give me a maximum of five minutes,” she jokes. “Kids are kids … still, they are the main subjects for the Quarantine Diary project, along with

Betsy.”

The family adopted Betsy as a puppy from a shelter in Abu Dhabi. “She is two years old now. We are very lucky to have Betsy as member of our family. She is the most wonderful dog I ever knew, and she never refuses to pose for a picture.”

The collage First Award is dedicated to Betsy. It shows the saluki-pointer mix in a regally collared outfit, pinned with a medal that looks like those awarded for bravery and service.

“In a way, the collage is dedicated to all pets in quarantine. Their lives significan­tly changed after distance learning was implemente­d. Their calm and relaxed life (when children were at school) was transforme­d into a permanent hide and seek game.

“I told my children that I will award Betsy with the First Order Award after the quarantine. She deserves it.”

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 ?? Olga Fedorova ?? Clockwise from top left: ‘Life’; ‘Outfit’; and ‘Days’; artist Olga Fedorova; ‘First Award’, which features Betsy the artist’s family dog
Olga Fedorova Clockwise from top left: ‘Life’; ‘Outfit’; and ‘Days’; artist Olga Fedorova; ‘First Award’, which features Betsy the artist’s family dog
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