Anatoly Cherkasov »
PLATINUM PRINT
Exhibition: 29 May – 30 Jun 2013
Tue 28 May 18:00
ROSPHOTO. State Museum and Exhibition Centre for Photography
ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35
191186 Saint-Petersburg
The State Russian Museum and Exhibition Centre ROSPHOTO
ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35
191186 Saint-Petersburg
+7-812-3141214
office@rosphoto.org
www.rosphoto.org
daily 11-19, Tue, Thu 11-21
State Museum and Exhibition Centre for Photography ROSPHOTO
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
ANATOLY CHERKASOV
PLATINUM PRINT
29.05 – 30.06.2013
Opening: 28 May 2013 at 18.00
Front Building exhibition hall, 2 floor
"In one way or another, our perception of the world is influenced by multiple factors that not necessarily need to be defined. Domination of sensuous impressions corrected by meditation, or, at other times, thought dictating the emotions and moods. Art easily brings together both and probably serves to synthesize them. Photography has its own responsibilities: starting at general organization of sensor mechanics (to look) it intends to help see (through lens and viewfinder) exactly what shall become art, is to be art and is in some sense programmed to be art initially, so to speak, by God.
The dawn of the new century brings us to question whether it is the documented couleur local alone that thrills the soul of viewer at recognizing images of the native shore. Let’s not think of the Western artists: their tasks are different. Our aim is to define the metaphysics of the Russian space in its mysterious infinity. A Russian can only vaguely imagine the limits of his existence but reaches the heart of it perfectly well.
It is in the search of the heart of existence that the Russian turns to each meaningful motif, a road disappearing in the rye field, a sunlit birch grove, river flowing between the banks. The soul seeks to find its way into the seen and the selected. Into what reminds us of the 19 century Russian Realism painting, Isaak Levitan, Ivan Shishkin, Ilya Ostroukhov, Arkhip Kuindzhi, Mikhail Nesterov. And it is anything but pastiche. Painters were the first to discover symbolic meaning of the images they found. Photography neglected them, strange as it may seem. It brought about the abundance of perspective, pictorial possibilities, combined printing et c. An artist now, equipped with all that contemporary technology can offer, examines the volumes of the earth’s surface, character of the flow of one space into another, the balance of hills and groves, the solemnity of skyline. With epicism and vigilance of Old Dutch masters, he searches for ever more proofs. And it seems that, with the faith of the old masters, our artist photographer starts anew..."
V.S. Turchin
Professor, Doctor of Art History, Art historian