Viktor Toporov: “Instead of depicting objective (external) reality
under the angle of this or that creative method, visionary art presumes
depicting reality as subjective (internal), which is only indirectly connected
to the objective reality: “unprecedented collection of past experiences” (as
academician Pavlov defined dreams - daydreams in our case).
Visionary art has grown historically from religious and mystical
practices (e.g. Biblical prophets) and was spread to clerical paintings of late
Middle Ages, first of all, in the pictures of the Judgment Day. The key figure
of the visionary direction in art was great English poet and artist William
Blake, who has devised (drawing on Swedenborg and Bohme) his own theogony and
cosmology, having described it in the collection of poems under a common title
“Illuminated Books” and illustrated them with wonderful relief etchings.
Starting from the works of Blake (around 200 years ago and later),
visionary art was secularized and diversified: it became the world of
individual Doors of Perception (according to Aldous Huxley), the world of
individual Altered States of Consciousness from Hoffman, Gogol and Edgar Poe to
Daniil Andreev, Carlos Castaneda and Garcia Marquez. Similar processes took
place in painting - from figurative romantic visionary art of Taras Shevchenko
(less-known works will be presented within our exhibition) to suprematism of
Malevich, not mentioning significant artistic endeavors of our days (once again
covering a wide spectrum - from Lucian Freud and Maxim Kantor - another
participant of our exhibition - to some Hirst).”
The concept of the project is connected with two issues: 1)
separating true visionary art from its commercial imitation; in this regard, we
fully rely on our curators); 2) realization of visionary art as a cognitive
phenomenon connected - via Savant syndrome or directly - with autism.
The exhibition is multidisciplinary: it also includes public
lectures (V. Toporov, M. Kantor, M. Trofimenkov), literary performances and a
master class in “visionary” writing (Natalia Romanova), film screening (film
“Hunter”, presented by leading actor and Nika Award winner Tatiana Shapovalova
and Kiev critic Sergey Semenov), as well as a special screening of a
multi-genre project entitled “Teutoburg Forest” (Kantor-Toporov).
The art part will feature works by artists from St Petersburg
(author of legendary “Limonka” Pavel Losev, Grigoriy Yushchenko), Kiev (participants
of the sensational exhibition “Apocalypse and Renaissance in the Chocolate
House” Michael Merfenko and David Chichkan) and lightboxes developed in collaboration with IZOLYATSIA, winner of the 7th Arte Laguna Prize 13, Richard Ansett UK.
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