Ilya & Emilia Kabakov 'The flying paintings'
March 17 - April 17, 2010
Opening in the presence of the artists on Wednesday, March 17th from 6:30pm to 9pm.
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce the opening of a new exhibition of
paintings by Ilya and Emilia Kabakov: The Flying Paintings, opening on Wednesday the 17th
of March in the presence of the artists. This new body of paintings continues the work the
Kabakovs have developed in the past decade with the notion of whiteness as a ground upon
which fleeting images of the past appear like leaves floating in the wind across the surface of
the paintings.
These large new works in both the horizontal and vertical format appear almost filmic in their
dimension. The artists present us with a world gone white, a blank page of history or
imagination upon which the Kabakovs catch – like frames from a home movie or
photographs, moments of lost time, – scenes recreated from bits of propaganda from their
Russian childhood. On the one hand, we have everyday life portrayed with a pictorial
memory of someone looking back at family photographs, or posters from another era on the
other.
We see a group of women students, on a trip standing by a river heads turned together in
conversation, but the image is falling into the painting like something that exists by accident,
and the randomness of its placement in the upper left hand side of a big white canvas,
implies that as much as the emotion of the day can be caught in memory, the world around
this, and the feelings therein, are gone. The Kabakovs show this world with a distance and
objectivity of a filmmaker and the distance is something that adds a nuance of emotion in
every vignette, no matter how quotidian.
There are men at work, a veterinarian and his nurse coaxing a young cow up the path, a
beekeeper dressed in his cloak and mask, is pulling the honey combs out of the hive, but this
image is stretched along the lower part of a large horizontal canvas, it appears almost
mannerist because the Kabakovs have let this elongated image slide into the frame at an
oblique angle. So that it is bigger on one side than on the other. We feel like we are caught in
a visual moment somewhere between the distortion of early Futurist films and later the everydayness
of the Russian Cinema of Eisenstein. Work is noble, daily life has its rhythms and
joys, there is a humor and sentiment laced through these paintings that very much reflects
the sense of utopian idealism that filters through much of the Kabakovsʼ world view. These
are paintings about time, space, the pictorial tradition of Russian painting, and how radical
painting can often take the subliminal route to entice and satisfy the eye.
During the month of February, Ilya & Emilia Kabakov will bring Peter Eötvösʼs opera to life
with their imaginative installation of sculptures for 'The Tragedy of the Devil', at the National
Theatre in Munich. They will be showing the preparatory drawings in the galleryʼs Project
Space.
The Kabakovs have been working together collaboratively since 1989. They have worked on
large scale projects and ambitious installations throughout the world including the Russian
Pavillion of the 45th Venice Biennale in 1993, a solo exhibition at the State Hermitage
Museum in St. Petersburg, 2004; major group shows have included Magicians de la Terre at
the Centre Pompidou, Paris in 1989, Documenta IX Kassel, Germany 1992 and a large-scale
historic exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum New York, 2005. They were awarded the
prestigious Praemium Imperiale in 2008. In September 2009, they had a major retrospective
in Moscow, in the Pushkin Museum and the CCC Melnikov Garage. They live and work in
New York.
An exhibition catalogue designed by the artists with an essay by Rod Mengham of Jesus
College at Cambridge University will be published in conjunction with the exhibition. The
entire series of The Flying Paintings will be reproduced in this color catalogue.
For further information regarding the exhibition, please contact Jill Silverman Van Coenegrachts,
[email protected].