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Exhibition agenda January - May, 2023
For the first part of 2023, we are presenting an international exhibition agenda, including both Romanian and international artists, focusing on solo and group shows.
Each exhibition includes the following events: opening, guided tour & 5’clock Tea at the gallery, The One You Feed - guided discussion on the subject generated by the running exhibition, and closing reception.
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Solo Shows
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Andrei Costache
January 27 - February 17, 2023More about the artistAfter 11 years in the UK, of which 6 in London, Andrei Costache has returned to his hometown of Constanta, Romania in 2022. He is the only artist in the world to print high resolution digital art with sculpture on top - translating the digital line in 3D and linking the virtual with the physical.
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Anna Khodorkovskaya
April 6 - May 27, 2023More about the artistHer works create a new visual territory generated by the tension between life and art. Elements from everyday visual culture are appropriated, remixed and transformed into a personal reflection about society and its own informational rhythm. Advertising, cooking, toys or mass-media-industry elements are overlapping while producing in real time an already nostalgic and obsolete aesthetic that the artist uses in her paintings, installations and performances.
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Group Show
1 - 31 of March, 2023A group exhibition that celebrates the feminine identity and explores the way in which the individual defines and communicates herself within the community of which she is part, while navigating between her own narrative and the norms imposed by society. How much of a person's identity is lost when it is contained in a definition?
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Lea Rasovszky
Based in Bucharest, RomaniaMore about the artistLea Rasovszky is interested in marginal cultural subjects, from areas such as kitsch, cartoons, "manele", bodybuilding and other stories or "psychological peripheries" that are not purely social.
Her artworks are, most often, portraits in motion of people, situations, and emotions filtered through an ironic and rough drawing style that highlight the stereotypes and values of the society towards which she has a critical view.
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Ileana Pașcalău
Based in Berlin, GermanyMore about the artistShe examines the role of artists and doctors in the cultural transition from the one-sex anatomical model to the two-sex model, the impact of the „discovery" of women sexuality as well as non-binary narratives in the Early Modern Age.
Her latest sculptures and installations follow collective fears in their coercive expression but also individual biographies capable of breaching them, shaping thus the history of our present bodies. -
Bianca Mann
Based in Bucharest, RomaniaMore about the artistShe has been interested in her recent projects in the subject of identity, based on two elements – the mask and the spot – the latter being used as both an opportunity to talk about what psychologists call blind spots and as a formal element bearing the similarities with inkblots used in the analysis of the perception of images to determine one’s personality.
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