ABSOLUT
GENERATION
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interview with Oleg Kulik
TV>
interview with Hans Hollein and Lois Renner
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interview with Eva Kempe Forsberg, the Absolut Company
The
Blue Noses
‘Even a bear should be able to understand our art.’
As well as working in their native Siberia, Moscow and St Petersburg,
The Blue Noses have exhibited and performed in London, Vienna and Berlin.
The group was founded in 1999 when 12 artists locked themselves in a
bomb shelter and refused to create any art. As well as live performance,
The Blue Noses make short films, photography and installation. In Venice,
the group is represented by Viacheslav Mizin and Alexander Shaburov.
One’s first instinct is to see The Blue Noses as descendants of
the Marx Brothers, Keaton and Chaplin. In fact their work has an older
lineage in the tradition of the skomorokhs – jesters of the tzars’
courts. Holding cultural clichés up to ridicule is part of their
heritage, as it is for all Russians, so they wear the ear-flapped hats
which identify them as Russian artists : destructive, bearded, drunks
infatuated with
Mother Russia. Their Russian-ness also extends to their adoption of
Tolstoy’s views that the future artist will live the life of an
ordinary person and that writing a touching song or a fairytale is much
more important than the creation of an epic or a symphony. Thus, in
the manner befitting any serious absurdists, they consider real art
to be seducing somebody on a one-night stand - or perhaps sleeping with
your dog. Like all great clowns, they seduce with charm, self-deprication
and laughter only to whack you a moment later with biting social and
political satire – or the realisation that the idiot in this scene
is you.
Together
in ABSOLUT GENERATIONS
The humour in Oleg Kulik’s work is often overshadowed by its threatening
nature and what is absurd in his work is sometimes obscured by a century
of art during which the absurd was normalised. While The Blue Noses
claim to have been influenced by no one, Kulik’s performance work
has clearly been a reference point. For ABSOLUT GENERATIONS, the mentor
has made a number of impressive verité waxworks, one of which
has already been exhibited. He calls it ‘The Sportswoman’
and it bears a striking resemblance to Anna Kournikova. In exhibition
with the four new figures, it is an engagement with the global symbols
that form an evolving, ubiquitous language where words are replaced
by human beings, or rather, their public image. Referencing Kulik’s
‘Dead Monkeys’ series, The Blue Noses present a film featuring
a monkey who drinks ABSOLUT and evolves into Charles Darwin.
Absolut
Renner>>>
Aspassio
Haronitaki>>>
Richard
Wentworth and Semiconductor>Interacting
with Art Online: ABSOLUT NEXT GENERATION
foto:
www.absolut.com, Oleg Kulik
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