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Старый 26.09.2012, 23:58 Язык оригинала: Русский       #9
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По умолчанию Kommersant FM 93,6

I add, as usual, some of the comments in the media.
this one is more than friendly. because Basile - Friend
http://www.kommersant.ru/doc/2030766


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At the "Winery" an exhibition "Rose Wine", Sergei Bazileva - one of the founders of the Soviet hyperrealism. In the early 80s the artist moved from Kiev to Moscow, where it was easier to develop non-traditional art, says Dmitry Butkevich. The exhibition is also timed to produce a series of postcards, adds analyst.
I am particularly pleased that the show my old dear friend Sergei Bazileva runs the gallery is one of my friend Alexander Sharov. Gallery 11.12 and is called the "winery". The exhibition is called "Rose Wine" features 15 paintings, written specifically for the project, and about love. Favorite elements - water, a favorite place - the Crimea, the favorite female characters. This, says Serge, "True Stories from the life of an artist."
It might look, at least, a kind of truism, if expressed in any modern system of verbal, and visual and scenic - too. Just not in the system, which employs Basile - one of the founders of the Soviet hyperrealism. Indeed, as is commonly believed, the roots can be found in hyperrealism philosopher Jean Baudrillard, who in the 80s wrote: "Simulation of something that never really existed." However, they add modern scholars, the current "hyper", "picture could well happen".


but quite a bit of hyper-realism of the second part

In the early 70's this direction came from the U.S. to France (well, actually, "hyperrealism" - just a synonym for the French designation of American creativity fotorealistov). In the late 70's it has penetrated through Germany and the Soviet Union, first in Kiev and Tallinn, finally, to Moscow.
"Kiev hyper", which, in fact, there were three, three Sergei - Basile, Geta, Sherstyuk - in the early 80's left Kiev for Moscow. It was a kind of "inner emigration." In Kiev, as told Basil, it was difficult, almost impossible, "dissent" in the huge Moscow was easier to "get lost" from public view.
Finishing the story about the exhibition "Rose Wine", which runs at the gallery until 11.12 on October 15, saying that the exhibition specially published a series of postcards. Describe one. Depicted men who fight. Called "Hot picture. Artists." On the back of each card has a short maxim. In this written: Action Painting (Tribute to Hermann Nitsch).



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