Irony as a Landscape | Oleg BORODIN, Alexander LYUBIN, Anton ZABRODIN in Moscow
Irony as a landscape is a joint project of young photographers Oleg Borodin, Anton Zabrodin, and Alexander Lyubin. Working with the concept of symbolism and irony, as well as postulating the objecthood of photography, its output extends beyond the surface of the prints. The authors put varying degrees of visual intensity to make a broad bright statement.
Irony as a Landscape
Oleg Borodin, Alexander Lyubin, Anton Zabrodin
27 January to 07 February
Project is supported by the Foundation of Vladimir Smirnov and Konstantin Sorokin
The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography, Moscow
PR Info _ Irony as a landscape is a joint project of young photographers Oleg Borodin, Anton Zabrodin, and Alexander Lyubin. Working with the concept of symbolism and irony, as well as postulating the objecthood of photography, its output extends beyond the surface of the prints. The authors put varying degrees of visual intensity to make a broad bright statement.
Through an artist’s perspective, landscape functions in new ways. Relying on principles of irony (the contrast between the literal meaning of a statement and its underlying significance, mockery, and profanity) photography easily transforms landscape from a background into a subject and a tool for testing the boundaries of reality.
Alexander Lyubin crudely cuts reality, mixing the signified and the signifier. He peers into the artificial and flattens the natural with a flash of light. Dense leafage depicted with thick layers of green paint printed on a banner overshadows the three-dimensional nature of the tree in the same photographic frame. Moreover, the artist’s irony covers the term of the simulacrum – the notion which questions the materiality of world. The author brings this semantic tension to the limit, to the point of releasing it altogether.
Oleg Borodin’s new series combines two strands, which he has worked with for the last several years: direct documentary photography and collage. Two opposite approaches in terms of the use of effects. Concise detached vistas of suburban areas seem to have a lack of intrigue or mystery. However, Borodin encircles the works in warning tape signaling to the viewer the possibility of being deceived. Red-white tape, a sign ubiquitous in a city landscape, serves to demarcate dangerous areas, which contain errors. Looking more closely one can discern elegiac, candid and ironic fantasy, the artist’s dream about an ideal view from the window. Flood-meadows, birch trees loom through high-rise buildings, garages and transformation vaults.
Anton Zabrodin’s installations are built around deserted landscapes, devoid of narratives and symbols. Inside these spaces, the artist places a surrogate of meaning – an illuminated road sign. The bright eye catching symbol of a sign, combined with the absence of meaning, brings irony to his work.
Info + illus. courtesy The Lumiere Brothers Center for Photography