🗓️June 25, 2021 – September 25, 2021
BABY STROLLER FACTORY
📍5 Sorokaletiya Komsomola Embankment, Vyborg 188800 Russia
◆ CYLAND at the “Chronotop” Contemporary Art Festival◆
CYLAND MediaArtLab takes part in the Chronotop Contemporary Art Festival in Vyborg.
The aim of the project is to emphasize the complexity and eclecticism of the urban space of Vyborg, and to put new meanings and artistic interpretations on its cultural map. The festival venues will be the Alvar Aalto city library, the water tower on Batareinaya Hill and the Mon Repos Park. The festival is held with the technical and curatorial support of our media laboratory: at Chronotop, CYLAND will present a series of installations and video art works (curated by Anna Frants, Varvara Egorova), and hold two video screenings (curated by Victoria Ilyushkina, Dasha Dafis, Ilkka Pitkänen).
Images: Anton Khlabov / CYLAND
Installations, objects, video, experimental sound
Curators: Varvara Egorova, Anna Frants, Elena Gubanova
Participants: Anna Frants, Elena Gubanova, Ivan Govorkov, Alexey Grachev, Andrey Strokov, Alexander Bochkov.
The Multitude, sound installation – Alexei Grachev, Andrei Strokov, Alexander Bochkov, 2021
In their new site-specific multi-channel sound installation “The Multitude”, Alexei Grachev, Andrei Strokov and Alexander Bochkov study acoustic properties of a space. By placing various sources of sound under concrete semi-spheres, the artists study the parameters of the sound’s distribution and focusing. The performance uses polymer batteries, portable speakers, control units with low power consumption, 3D-print and generative projection, which reacts sensitively to the acoustic features of the building, reducing the human footprint in the minimalist-functional space of the 2nd floor of a water tower.
Life as Life. STYX, site-specific installation – Elena Gubanova, Ivan Govorkov, 2016
Usually, Time is regarded as a line (theoretically, a line of endless length), on which the present moment is a point in constant motion. But this line may also be regarded as a succession of points in different positions, so that any moving or changing object may be interpreted as a number of motionless versions of “shots” of oneself. The artists observe the serene flow of life, but at the same time disrupt the “arrow of time”. Life consists of repetitions which seem to combine to form a single “river”. The video of people floating serenely along the river from one screen to another actually shows the same moment, which is multiplied and repeated, devoid of past and future, and joined into a cycle.
Seventh Heaven, site-specific installation – Elena Gubanova, Ivan Govorkov, 2021
“Seventh Heaven”, an expression signifying the highest degree of joy, happiness, and bliss, derives from the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 BC), who described the arrangement of the celestial spheres in his work “On the Heavens”. The installation examines the urge to break free from the heaviness of existence, from boundaries and illusions, from fears and time, and from the earth’s gravity.
World Famous!, video — Elena Gubanova & Ivan Govorkov, 2017
An ironic statement by the authors about the main motivation of artistic work. Only this prospect attracts the modern artist, everything else is just the invention of a devious mind.
Elena Gubanova
Born in 1960 in Ulyanovsk, USSR. Artist, curator. Graduated from the Ilya Repin State Academic Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (Leningrad, USSR). Works in the fields of painting, sculpture, installations and video. Recipient of the Sergey Kuryokhin Award (2012, Russia) for “Best Work of Visual Art” (together with Ivan Govorkov). Her works have been exhibited at major Russian and foreign venues, including the Hermitage Museum, the Russian Museum, Museum of Moscow, University Ca’ Foscari (Venice, Italy), Chelsea Art Museum (New York, USA) and Kunstquartier Bethanien (Berlin, Germany). Participant of the Manifesta 10 parallel program (2014, St. Petersburg, Russia) and several exhibitions parallel to Venice Biennale (since 2011); frequent participant of Cyberfest. Since 1990, she has worked in collaboration with Ivan Govorkov. Lives and works in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Ivan Govorkov
Born in 1949 in Leningrad, USSR. Artist. Graduated from the Ilya Repin State Academic Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (Leningrad, USSR). He is engaged in philosophy, psychology, painting, drawing, sculpture and installations; he works at the junction of traditional art and cutting-edge technologies. Professor of drawing at the Ilya Repin Institute (St. Petersburg, Russia). Recipient of the Sergey Kuryokhin Award (2012, Russia) for “Best Work of Visual Art” (together with Elena Gubanova). His works have been exhibited at major Russian and foreign venues, including the Hermitage Museum, the Russian Museum, Museum of Moscow, University Ca’ Foscari (Venice, Italy), Chelsea Art Museum (New York, USA), Kunstquartier Bethanien (Berlin, Germany), and Sky Gallery 2 (Tokyo, Japan). Participant of the Manifesta 10 parallel program (2014, St. Petersburg, Russia) and several exhibitions parallel to the Venice Biennale (since 2011); frequent participant of Cyberfest. Since 1990, he worked in collaboration with Elena Gubanova. Lives and works in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Anxiety, multimedia installation — Anna Frants, 2014
An allegory of anxious states – there is no love, no compassion – just anxiety. The project represents a carefully produced stage drama whose cast of characters is a casually thrown draping. Its “choreography” is achieved by work of the ventilators of various power levels and the theater lighting. The presented show is meant to evoke an uneasy feeling.
Anna Frants
Born in 1965 in Leningrad, USSR. Artist, curator in the field of media art. She graduated from the Vera Mukhina Higher School of Art and Design (Leningrad, USSR) and Pratt Institute (New York, USA). Cofounder of the nonprofit cultural foundation St. Petersburg Arts Project, CYLAND Media Art Lab and Cyberfest. Frants’ interactive installations have been showcased at Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art (Russia), Video Guerrilha Festival (Brazil), Manifesta 10 Biennale (St. Petersburg, Russia, 2014), Museum of Art and Design (New York, USA), Hermitage Museum (St. Petersburg, Russia), Chelsea Art Museum (New York, USA), Russian Museum (St. Petersburg, Russia), Kunstquartier Bethanien (Berlin, Germany) and at other major venues all over the world. The artist’s works are held in the collections of the Russian Museum (St. Petersburg, Russia), Museum of Art and Design (New York, USA), Sergey Kuryokhin Center for Modern Art (St. Petersburg, Russia) and Kolodzei Art Foundation (New York, USA) as well as in numerous private collections. Lives and works in New York, USA, and St. Petersburg, Russia.
Video art
Curators: Victoria Ilyushkina, Dasha Dafis
Participants: Saara Ekström, Jenni Toikka, Alyona Tereshko, Viktoria Ilyushkina, Alexander Antipin, Alexander Borisov.
Amplifier — Saara Ekström, 2017, 17 min. 3 sec.
Time inevitably moves from past to future, passing the present moment. Mankind encloses to time its marks, stains and ruins. On the verge of vast changes time acts abnormally. It leaks, folds and fractures, allowing things belonging elsewhere, to the otherworldly, to permeate itself. In the 8mm film the Helsinki Olympic Stadium represents a historical paradigm shift. Completed in 1938 the building outlines pure functionalist architecture and stands as a landmark for optimistic utopia and the oblivion on man’s neglect of history.
Saara Ekström (Author), Saara Ekström (Cinematographer), Saara Ekström (Director), Eero Tammi (Editor), Saara Ekström (Script), Pietu Korhonen (Sound Design), Heikki Vienola (Actor), AVEK — The Promotion Centre for Audiovisual Culture (Funder), Alfred Kordelin Foundation (Funder).
Saara Ekström
Born 1965. She works in film, photography, text and installation. Chronotopes where time and place densify, time that nurtures and erodes, the ambivalent desire to both remember and forget are at the core of her art. Ekstr.m’s work has been shown extensively in various museums and festivals in Europe, the Americas and Asia. She received the Finnish media art prize AVEK-award in 2018 and the prizes of SW Finland in 2017, Finnish Art Society in 1995 and the Aboa prize in 1994. She has been the Helsinki Festival Artist in 2005 and was nominated for both Ars Fennica and Carnegie Art Award prizes in 2010.
The exhibition presents works of renowned video artists from Finland and Russia. At the festival in Vyborg, Saara Ekström’s work about the architecture of the Olympic Stadium in Helsinki will be exhibited in Russia for the first time. The heroes of the works are the buildings themselves: from the villa of the architect Alvar Aalto in France to new housing developments, industrial buildings and an abandoned children’s pioneer camp in the Leningrad Oblast. Through performance, choreography, dramaturgy, digital photography and video collages, artists convey the emotional sensation of modern architecture and its immersion in the environment. The video works investigate the topic of interaction between humans and architectural spaces, structures and their elements in the historical context, and the “genius loci” – “the spirit of the place”.
The exhibition is organized with the support of the Finnish Institute in St. Petersburg, the Av-arkki Center of Finnish Media Art and CYLAND MediaArtLab.
WATER TOWER ON BATAREINAYA HILL
2 Batareiny Passage
Photo by Anton Khlabov
