Anton Ginzburg and Dasha Shishkin
Partial Eclipse
October 20–November 20, 2019
Upcoming two-person exhibition Partial Eclipse at Fridman Gallery, (169 Bowery, New York 10002)
the product of a yearlong dialogue between New York–based artists Anton Ginzburg and Dasha Shishkin.Informed by Exquisite Corpse — the surrealist game merging disparate ideas and images to form unexpected wholes — the artists employ collage, chance, and humor to reveal unanticipated relationships between their artworks. Though using seemingly different formal vocabularies, the artists share many themes and interests, with an eye on traditions of Russian Futurists and avant-garde artists, writers, and musicians, including collectives of the 1920s and 1930s, such as the multidisciplinary OPOYAZ and OBERIU.The artists’ process uses the gallery’s physical space by creating color fields and surprising spatial relationships between viewers and artworks. Unusual juxtapositions between different works in the gallery are ongoing experiments of structural and formal methods, where images are not simply stand-ins for objects but objects themselves. Downstairs, Anton Ginzburg will present a video A Million.The exhibition’s title, Partial Eclipse, reflects this method between the two artists — and between artists and viewers — of continually concealing and revealing unexpected forms and meanings in a dialogue between two bodies of works of the artists.An illustrated catalog with an essay by Katya Tylevich will accompany the exhibition.
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Anton Ginzburg uses film, sculpture, painting, and text-based work to investigate historical narratives and poetic studies of place, representation, and post-Soviet identity. He earned an MFA from Bard College, Milton Avery Graduate School of Arts. Ginzburg’s work has been shown at the 54th Venice Biennale, Blaffer Art Museum, Palais de Tokyo, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, White Columns, Lille3000, the first and second Moscow Biennales, and Cooper-Hewitt. Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, Ginzburg is based in New York City.
Dasha Shishkin’s signature figurative drawings on Mylar use vivid colors, flattened perspective, and overlapping, non-hierarchical narratives. Shishkin earned an MFA from Columbia University. Solo exhibitions include Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, Boulder, Colorado; Museum of Contemporary Art, Santa Barbara, California; Griffelkunst, Hamburg, Germany; and Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Ohio. Group exhibitions include “Greater New York,” MoMA PS1, New York; Saatchi Gallery, London; and the Dakis Joannou Collection, Athens. Born in Moscow, Russia, Shishkin is based in New York City.