Life chronicle of late Soviet-era and new Russian artistic circles
This selection of Alexander Zabrin's photographs is the life chronicle of the artistic circles in the 1980s and the 1990s. It is dedicated to the time when art came out into the open and the notions of underground and non-conformism were replaced with the term contemporary art.
These photographs are a unique opportunity to witness the life of that epoch and those who symbolized it: Konstantin Zvezdotchotov, Sergey Kuryokhin, Vladislav Mamyshev-Monroe, Yuri Sobolev, Sergey Shutov, Mukhomori (Toadstools) and The World Champions art groups, musicologist Tatyana Didenko, artists Eduard Gorokhovsky, Dmitry Prigov, Timur Novikov, art critic Sergey Kuskov, to name a few.
"The interest of photographer Alexander Zabrin's to the life of Moscow (and somewhat Saint-Petersburg) art crowd was inspired by the memorable events that ushered in reforms of the 1980s. The powerful current of the growing counter-cultural movement attracted anything active and living. Being already known as the leading chronicler of Soviet jazz and therefore close to the underground art life, Zabrin easily switched to new themes, the more so since the protest potential of jazz music was in another crisis at the moment. The late 1980s was the time when, within the underground culture, all kinds of practices in music, art and theater easily merged and masterfully overcame any limitations. Many heroes of those years would not be able to define exactly who they were. An artist could be at the same time a poet, a musician would create paintings, a theater director could try himself as curator or a drummer. No one was limited to anything and no one wished to set any limits to himself. Feeling the feebleness of ideology (or maybe easily imposed to the system's simulation of feebleness), the new young culture was like a geyser that exploded the art world of the late empire, terrifying both the adherers of Social Realism and the elder generation of underground artists. Such was the reality of the epoch which Zabrin pointed his camera at. Although this is not the whole story. Zabrin was never just a passive onlooker, on the contrary, he became the insider of the art circle, friend to many artists and at times even their assistant and co-author".
Bogdan Mamonov
Born in 1948 in Moscow. Has been engaged with photography since 1970.
1978 Completed a two-year photojournalism course at the House of Journalists
1980–2000 Head of the photographic laboratory of the Department of Arts and technical design of printed materials, Moscow Polygraphic Institute
1989 Prize-winner of the Jazz Photo International Exhibition in Warsaw
2003 Nominee at Silver Camera 2003 Photography Contest
Solo exhibitions at jazz festivals:
Arkhangelsk (1982, 1989–1992, 2014); Birštonas (1986); Cheboksary (1986, 1988); Grenoble (2007); Izhevsk (2005); Moscow (1982–1984, 1988, 1990, 1994); Muenster (1990); Novosibirsk (1986, 1993–1994); Riga (1985–1988); Samara (1984); Tbilisi (1986); Tallinn (1988); Yaroslavl (1981, 1989, 1991, 1993); Zurich (1989)
Solo exhibitions:
1994 Solo exhibition at the Theater Vernissage, Moscow
1995 A. Zabrin, V. Yakovlev, K. Mamonov. Photography, Painting, Graphic Art. Moscow, Moskovskaya Palitra Gallery
1996 Kalyazin, Yakutia. Jazz. Photobiennale. Moscow, Moskovskaya Palitra Gallery
Playing Jazz (collaboration with graphic artist M. Perfilyeva). Warsaw, Russian Center for Culture and Science
1998 I Have Seen Lenin. Moscow, Dar Gallery
1999 Jazz. Followed by the presentation of four photo books. Moscow, Soros Center for Contemporary Art
Stars of Jazz. To the 100th anniversary of Duke Ellington. Moscow, Spaso House
1999–2000 I Have Seen Lenin. Yaroslavl, Yaroslavl Art Museum; Samara, V. I. Lenin Memorial Museum
2002 Jazz. The 2nd Photo Festival Pro Zrenie. Nizhny Novgorod, Nizhny Novgorod Fair
2003 Reflections and Shadows (exhibition and artist talk). Moscow, Moscow Jewish Community Center
Exhibition in memoriam artist Yuri Sobolev. Moscow, Cultural Center Dom
2004–2005 Solo exhibitions in France. Grenoble, Gabriel Peri Library, Paul Langevin Library
2006 Recalling Vladimir Yakovlev. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
2007 France, Khiva (Uzbekistan), China. Grenoble, France. Gabriel Peri Library, Paul Langevin Library
2007 West — East. Tallinn, Russian Gallery
Walking around Moscow Cineraria. Moscow, Moscow Museum of Modern Art
Mongol — Two Realities. Moscow, Moscow Museum of Modern Art; Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
2008–2009 Triumph of Jazz. 1978–2008. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography; Moscow, Moscow Museum of Modern Art
2009 At Vladimir Yakovlev’s Easel. To the 75th anniversary of Vladimir Yakovlev (A. Zabrin, K. Mamonov. Graphic art, photography). Moscow, Zverev Center of Contemporary Art
2010 Contemporary Art-World Figures. 1985–1995. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
2011 Triumph of Jazz. Novosibirsk, Novosibirsk State Art Museum
Spain. 2002–2010. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
2012 Contemporary Art-World Figures (1985–1995). Moscow, Era Foundation
2013 Jazz in Photographs by A. Zabrin. KULTURUS Festival. Prague, Reduta Jazz Club
Contemporary Art-World Figures 1985–1995. St Petersburg, ROSPHOTO State Museum and Exhibition Center
2014 Mongol — Two Realities. Moscow, Photobiennale 2014. Parallel Program. Fine Art Gallery
2015 I Do Believe — I Don’t Believe. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
2016 Soviet Province. Kalyazin-1979, Khiva-1978, Yakutia-1991. Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Museum of Photography
Group exhibitions:
1984–1989 Jazz Photo International Exhibitions in Warsaw
1986 100 Best Photographs of the Jazz Photo Exhibition 1984–1986 in Warsaw. The Hague, the Netherlands
Gallery in the Gallery. Moscow, State Tretyakov Gallery
1997 The Others. Painting, Photography, Icons. Yaroslavl, City Exhibition Hall
2000 Jazz in Books and Photographs. Moscow, Russian State Library of Arts
Russia: 20th Century in Photographs. Photobiennale 2000. Moscow, Central House of Artists
Roofs and Parks. Moscow, Moscow Center of Arts
2001 60 Photographs of Vladimir Yakovlev. Art Moscow Fair. Moscow, Central House of Artists
2004 Silver Camera 2003 Contest. Moscow, Moscow House of Photography
2005 Russian View of Europe. Exhibition of the Moscow House of Photography in Brussels, Belgium
2006 Russian View of Europe. Photobiennale 2006. Moscow, State Museum of Architecture
2017 Kitchen. Moscow, Kovcheg Gallery
Books and films:
Soviet Jazz. Slide film. Director Y. Sobolev; screenwriter A. Kabakov; photographer A. Zabrin. Moscow, 1986
Soviet Jazz. Collection of research articles. Photographs by A. Zabrin. Moscow: Sovetsky Kompozitor, 1987
ODMO. Slide film. Director Y. Sobolev; artist B. Mamonov; photographer A. Zabrin. Moscow, 1988
Portrait of a Master of Photography: A. Zabrin. Moscow: Sputnik, 1988
Boy. Animated film. Director M. Krymova; screenwriter V. Zolotukha; photographer A. Zabrin. Moscow, 1997
Caligula. Stereo slide film. Director B. Mamonov, photographer A. Zabrin. Moscow, 1997
Jazz. Four photo books. Moscow, 1999
60 Photographs of Vladimir Yakovlev. Collectible photo book. Moscow, 2001
Contemporary Art-World Figures. 1985–1995. Photo book. Moscow, 2012
Triumph of Jazz. 1978–2012. Photo book. Moscow, 2013
Mongol — Two Realities. Photo book. Moscow, 2014
Еще
Documentary and creative photographs by Zabrin, graphic works and sculpture by Yakovlev
The heroes of Soviet and international jazz scene: Kenny Ball, Dave Brubeck, Igor Butman, Vladimir Volkov, Vladimir Feiertag, Billie Taylor, Oleg Lundstrem, Sergey Kuryokhin, David Golotschiokin and many others caught by 'the best jazz photographer' of USSR.
Your name:
Your Email:
By clicking "Submit" I agree to the collection and usage of my personal information in the form above This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное
Прямая ссылка: