MIRROR BY MIRROR, HOMAGE TO ANDREI TARKOVSKY BY SERGEI SVIATCHENKO
Curated by Trine Rytter Andersen
Galleri Image
The opening - Thusday, 9 October 16-18
Open Thusday-Sunday 13-17
The exhibition 'Mirror by Mirror', as well as the publication accompanying it, take the film 'The Mirror' by Russian film director Andrei Tarkovsky as their starting point; a film that has strongly influenced the understanding of art and visual formation of Danish visual artist and architect Sergei Sviatchenko. Ukrainian born living and working in Denmark for more than 20 years, this exhibition traces a path back to the roots of Sviatchenkos visual training at the school of architecture in Kharkov Ukraine.
Since Sviatchenko's teenage years, Tarkovsky's profoundly poetic and dramatic pictorial universe has nourished Sviatchenko's art and philosophy of life. 'Mirror by Mirror' crystallizes the essence of a never physically realized meeting between two artists, who, from their respective places in history, deal with images combining, at the same time, the distance of the imposing with the presence of the detail in urgently insistent and relevant attempts to comment on and describe the world, as well as the many physical and mental spaces that people enter throughout life. By mirroring his own work in Tarkovsky's, Sviatchenko stages his individual narrative as autonomous visual statements, borrowing from and referring to 'The Mirror'.
In search of inspiration and as a preliminary to the exhibition 'Mirror by Mirror', Sviatchenko went on a study tour to Moscow in June 2008. Receiving help from Irina Tchmyreva, curator and ph.D. in Art History, he got the chance to meet the author of a number of books on Andrei Tarkovsky: Tarkovsky's sister, Marina. She was deeply touched by Sergei Sviatchenko's visit, describing his art as both profoundly original and fully in accordance with the spirit of Andrei Tarkovsky: a striving towards the sublime and a particular sense of capturing and maintaining a momentary meeting between the conscious and the unconscious. Another major event for Sviatchenko in Moscow was his meeting with his former professor from the school of architecture in Kharkov, Victor Antonov, whose text on the meeting with Tarkovsky in the Soviet Union during the 80s is a special treat for the readers of the exhibition's extravagant catalogue.
Laying the groundwork for the way in which the exhibition was created, the study tour is one of the reasons that 'Mirror by Mirror' will be displayed in Russia. The exhibition is accompanied by a broadsheet catalogue in three languages composed of documentary film material from the shooting of 'The Mirror' and Sviatchenko's graphic adaptation of this material. The catalogue presents texts by Marina Tarkovskaya, Irina Tchmyreva, Victor Antonov, Mark Le Fanu and Per Carlsen, Danish Ambassador to Russia. The publication is made of several types of paper, colours, sizes and different type fonts created by London based graphic designer James Greenhow. Furthermore, Marina Tarkovsky has helped select the collage works included in the exhibition and in the catalogue.
THE CATALOGUE