Exhibition "Cretaceous period". Evgeny Grinevich and Natalya Kulikova Automatic translate
с 28 Июля
по 25 АвгустаГалерея “На Каширке”
ул. Ак.Миллионщикова, д.35, корп.5
Москва
July 28 in the gallery "On Kashirka" Association "Exhibition Halls of Moscow" will open an exhibition of Evgeny Grinevich and Natalia Kulikova "Cretaceous Period".
The Cretaceous Period is an experiment and a ritual. Man encrypts the collective memory of being in abstract images. A point, a line and a spot are the foundations from which visual messages have been recorded over the centuries.
Authors are used to working with chalk. Chalk and water - they use these materials to create graphic images in landscapes without leaving any traces. The main advantage of this art material is that it is short-lived. It is washed away by the first rain.
The artists used the same approach in the project “Solohodi” - a lyrical project that was created for several years on the shore of the Solovetsky Island in the White Sea. As a continuation of the large project "Cretaceous period", "Solohods" in a sense have already become a symbol of the Island. Two rusty abandoned ship on the shore are part of the landscape. Everyone is used to them and do not pay attention to them in everyday life.
In this way these ships were painted. From year to year, this procedure continued until the ships were cut and disposed of. From 2004 to 2007, more than twenty art objects were created, and a book with a poetic continuation was published. The Solokhods project is completed, but the Cretaceous Period continues.
The exhibition features graphics, photography, video.
Exhibition "Cretaceous period"
July 28 - August 25, 2018
Age qualification 6+
Gallery "On Kashirka"
Tue-Sun 11.00-20.00
Entrance ticket 100 rub., Preferential 50 rub.
Moscow, st. Ak. Millionshchikova, d. 35, bldg. 5
- “King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table” by Roger Lancelyn Green
- “The End Of The Affair” by Graham Greene
- “The Anthropocene Reviewed: Essays on a Human-Centered Planet” by John Green
- “Our Man in Havana” by Graham Greene
- “Paper Towns” by John Green
- Culture and religion of ancient Arabia