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RExhibition Lifts
Curtain Of Silence On Life In Soviet Uzbekistan
Photographs of a hidden revolution revealed
in UK for first time
2 November 2006, London: Over 200
photographs by Max Penson (1893-1959) documenting
the radical transformation of Uzbekistan
from a highly traditional feudal society
into a modern Soviet republic taken between
1920 and 1940 will be exhibited for the
first time in the UK, at the Gilbert Collection,
Somerset House.
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Public Exhibition: |
2006 - 24 February 2007 |
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Opening Hours: |
29 November 2006 - 24
February 2007 |
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Press
Preview: |
28 November, 10am - 2pm.
Olga Sviblova, curator, will give a
tour of the exhibition at 11am |
The exhibition is staged by the Moscow
House of Photography (www.mdf.ru) and curated
by Olga Sviblova, one of Russia's leading
arts specialists. Russian oligarch Roman
Abramovich has sponsored the exhibition
catalogue.
The exhibition forms the photography element
of the 2006 Russian ACT festival (www.russianact.co.uk),
a major celebration and showcase of Russian
culture taking place at venues across London
from 4 October to 2 December. The festival
includes orchestral music, theatre, jazz,
and two dance events; one featuring Igor
Zelensky and Darcy Bussell and the other
bringing contemporary dancers Diana Husein
and Anna Abalihina to London for the first
time. [Full festival details in notes to
editors].
The 20th-century history of Central Asian
countries like Uzbekistan had remained largely
hidden until the collapse of communism during
the early 1990s. Penson's archive contains
roughly 30,000 images taken while he worked
as a photographer for Central Asia's largest
newspaper, Pravda Vostoka (Truth
of the East), from 1926 until 1949. But,
accused of being influenced by the West,
he fell from official favour and in 1948
rising anti-Semitism forced him to leave
his job after 25 years of working at the
paper.
Penson's photographs document the sweeping
social transformation that happened during
this period, as well as showing an awareness
of the Modernist aesthetic being explored
by artists throughout Europe. Many of the
images are clearly underpinned by a socialist,
propagandist agenda and show an idealisation
of life under Soviet rule. However, Penson
also sought out his own subjects. In 1937
Penson took part in the World Exhibition
in Paris winning the Grand Prix for Uzbek
Madonna, a portrait of a young woman,
unveiled and publicly nursing her child.
Some images depict women in traditional
horsehair veils while in others they wear
trousers and drive tractors, previously
unheard-of tasks for women in this part
of the world. Men are shown digging vast
irrigation canals, attending literacy classes
and watching sporting events or theatrical
performances.
Max Penson was born in 1893 in the Belorussian
village of Velizh, the son of a bookbinder.
He studied art in Lithuania, returning to
his hometown in 1915. The Russian pogroms
forced him to flee to Kokand in Uzbekistan
not long after, where he found employment
as an art teacher. The gift of a camera
in 1921 changed his life, and from then
on he gave up painting, moved to Tashkent
and began working as a professional photographer.
He died in 1959 as a result of depression
and illness.
Olga Sviblova, curator and director of Moscow
House of Photography, said: "Working
independently and without teachers, he attained
the summits of photographic art. His work
deserves to be considered alongside other
Russian masters such as Grindberg Zelma
and Rodchenko. His work provides an insight
into the transformation of a society, hidden
and largely unreported during the time of
change; it is a stirring story. This is
the first time these images have been exhibited
in the UK and form the photographic element
of the 2006 Russian ACT festival."
Max Penson is the second exhibition
to be curated by Olga Sviblova at the Gilbert
Collection. The first, Quiet Resistance:
Russian Pictorial Photography, 1900-1930s,
was highly acclaimed and proved so popular
it was extended for two months.
The exhibition runs alongside the Gilbert
Collection's current exhibition, Britannia
and Muscovy: English Silver at the Court
of the Tsars; fine royal Tudor and Stuart
silver preserved in the Kremlin since its
arrival in Russia over 300 years ago. Works
of art from the Russian Court and Church,
including gold, silver and bejewelled objects
used for ceremonies, are also on display.
The Max Penson exhibition coincides with
auctions of Russian art at:
Sotheby's,
New Bond Street, London on 28 November
Christie's,
King Street, London on 29 November
END
Press preview:
28 November 10 am to 2 pm, exhibition tour
at 11 am
Invitations will be sent out at the beginning
of November. If you would like to attend the
preview/ receive an invitation please contact
Anna Cusden or Will Kallaway at Kallaway on
020 7221 7883.
Further information and images
Kallaway
Anna Cusden
anna.cusden@kallaway.co.uk
020 7221 7883
Will Kallaway
will.Kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
020 7221 7883
High resolution images can be downloaded
from: http://www.kallaway.co.uk/russian-act-picture-library.asp
ABOUT RUSSIAN ACT (www.russianact.co.uk)
Russian ACT is an international festival
that showcases Russia's rich and diverse
culture at venues across the world. This
year Russian ACT takes place in Singapore
and London. Compelling programmes are put
together by Russia's newest cultural leaders,
while concerts and exhibitions provide an
opportunity to experience Russia's past
masters.
Russian ACT in London (October 2
- December 4, 2006).
Russian ACT has been run in London for three
years, providing an insight into the arts
and culture of a country that has largely
baffled the British. Churchill referred
to Russia as a 'riddle wrapped inside an
enigma'.
Artists taking part at events across London
include Igor Zelensky and Darcy
Bussell, exploring what happens when
two great ballet traditions meet; violin
virtuoso, Gidon Kremer with Kremerata
Baltica; Maxim Shostakovich,
revisits his father's 15th symphony; Max
Penson's photographic chronicles of
the massive social changes in central Asia
are displayed for the first time; Diana
Husein and Anna Albalihina, two
rising stars of Russian modern dance; Sergei
Leiferkus returns to his St Petersburg
roots with a tribute to Shostakovich; Dmirty
Krymov and the School of Dramatic
Art, bring images to life and turn people
into puppets; the Moscow Composers Orchestra
rift with Russian Folk.
Russian ACT is organised by: marka:face:fashion
and supported by the
Russian Federal Agency for Culture and Cinematography,
Alfa Bank and Ural Sib.
Upcoming Russian ACT events in London:
JAZZ
Moscow Composers Orchestra
CARGO, 83 Rivington Street, Shoreditch,
14 November, 8pm
Presented in association with the London
Jazz Festival
Led by Vladimir Miller, a British pianist
and composer born to a Russian émigré
family in Chile, the Moscow Composers Orchestra
brings together celebrated musicians - including
bassist Vladimir Volkov and trumpeter Slava
Gayvoronsky - whose roots are in Russia
but whose careers span continents. The Moscow
Composers Orchestra offers fascinating musical
innovations from the border where two cultures
collide, taking harmonies from the West
and interlacing them with variations of
Russian folk. Combining original concert
programming with electronica, academic music,
jazz and world music, the Centre occupies
a unique niche in Moscow's rich cultural
landscape.
TICKETS: £12.50. Book online
at www.cargo-london.com or call Tickets
and Information on 020 7749 7840. See also
www.londonjazzfestival.com
THEATRE
The School of Dramatic Art
Director DMITRY KRYMOV
Riverside Studios, Crisp Road, London, W6
24 - 27 November, 7.45 p.m.
Presented in association with FEEAST
The laboratory space that is Moscow's School
of Dramatic Art arrives in London to tell
two new and very strange dramatic tales.
In Donky Khot, a wordplay on Cervantes'
supernovel, director Dmitry Krymov brings
to life a nostalgia for a world culture.
What results is a theatre in which reality
is as changeable as in cartoons, where drawn
images come alive and where people turn
into puppets. Not a Fairy Tale is a collage
of Russia's favourite stories turned on
their head: Red Riding Hood beaten to death
by hungry urchins; the Frog Princess fried
up for dinner, and the villainous dragon
Gorynich becoming an innocent victim. This
highly original piece was recently recognised
with a nomination for innovation at the
Russian Golden Mask awards.
TICKETS: £19 (£14 concs).
Book online at www.riversidestudios.co.uk
or call Tickets and Information on 020 8237
1111. See also www.feeast.com
DANCE
Igor Zelensky and Darcy Bussell
Sadler's Wells Theatre
28 November - 2 December, 7:30pm.
Darcy Bussell, the prima ballerina and the
principle guest soloist of the Royal Ballet,
Covent Garden join forces with Igor Zelensky
to create a spectacle of dance at Sadler's
Wells. Internationally acclaimed Igor Zelensky,
one of the worlds most accomplished ballet
dancers, is a principle of the Mariinksky
Theatre in St. Peterburg. Darcy Bussell
has been the Royal Ballet's prima ballerina
for almost two decades. Joined by colleagues
from the Bolshoi, Mariinsky and Royal Ballet
companies Bussell and Zelensky will present
a special programme of work by George Balanchine
and Roland Petit accompanied by modern choreography
from Alistair Marriott and Alla Sigalova.
Russian ACT showcases the collaborative
possibility of the marriage of these two
schools.
TICKETS: £13-£40. Book
online at www.sadlerswells.com or call Tickets
and Information on 0870 737 7737
Dina Husein and Anna Abalihina
In the Place of my Dream
The Place, 17 Duke's Road, WC1
1- 2 December, 7.30 p.m.
Graduates of both the Moscow Choreographical
Lyceum and the Rotterdam Dance Academy,
Dina Husein and Anna Abalihina, have pioneered
a unique fusion of classical and contemporary
dance, of Russian and western European styles.
After several years spent dancing in the
Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, the duo
are now based in Moscow, where they regularly
collaborate with leading Russian and foreign
choreographers, and always evoke huge interest
from both critics and the public when they
perform. Russian ACT bring to London a highly
acclaimed new piece, In the Place of my
Dream, created with the support of the Nations
State Theatre. Set to music by Richardas
Norvilla, and making inspired use of animations
and video effects, their work explores the
deepest reaches of human emotions and creates
a surreal world which sucks the audience
into the dancers' dreams and fantasies.
TICKETS: £5-£15. Book online
at www.theplace.org.uk or call Tickets and
Information on 020 7387 0031
Gilbert Collection, Somerset House.
The Gilbert Collection of decorative arts
is one of the most important gifts ever
made to the British nation and was received
by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen
Mother on 25 May 2000. The collection comprises
some 800 works of art and was formed over
the past 40 years by Sir Arthur Gilbert,
who was born in London in 1913 and moved
to California in 1949 where he lived until
his death on 2 September 2001. Magnificent
European silver, spectacular gold snuffboxes
and remarkable Italian mosaics occupy galleries
in the Embankment and South Buildings of
Somerset House, designed by Sir William
Chambers (1723-1796).
For further information about the Gilbert
Collection please contact Sue Bond, 01359
271085 or info@suebond.co.uk
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