Valera and Natasha Cherkashin

WORK WITH NEWSPAPERS

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THE END OF THE EPOCH
Exhibitions, installations
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Newspapers

MIRAGES OF EMPIRES
Russia

Germany   
America
Spain

PUTIN'S ERA
Art works

TRAVEL AS ART

America, Great Britain
Japan
   
Mongolia 

WORLD ATLANTISES
German Atlantis
Underwater performances


FAVORITE PORTRAITS
Exhibitions, works
World Bank  installation

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State Russian Museum
World Bank Installation


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To contact Cherkashins:
Chemuseum@yahoo.com

In the Periodicals of The Cherkashin Metropolitan Museum, the authority of one is overlaid and trumped by the other; the Socialist Realist code legitimized through the newspaper, Pravda, is countered by the square or cross, black and red. It is difficult to see this double focus unambiguously as a reclaiming of the historical avant-garde from the recently suppressed past, although in some images the colors applied to the surface of the newspapers, black and red, literally blot out the message conveyed by the type. This works in the other direction too: the square is represented by a whole unblemished cover page of Pravda. Thus, if the Cherkashins' work subverts the urgent message of party leaders, slogans, and denunciations they extract, neither is their effort particularly kind to Malevich. Their appropriations disrupt the purity of geometric forms, papers are folded, turned, reduced in scale. The primary code of Suprematism, and its universal appeal, is interrupted, reordered, opened to question. Neither Malevich's voice nor that of the Soviet State ultimately gains priority in this dialogue.


Jane A. Sharp
Curator of Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey


The Black "Pravda" collage, 1990.

The Red "Pravda" folded 8 times.

The Red "Pravda" collage, 1990

Newspaper Figure, 1994

Creation of a Newspaper Portrait. 1995

Newspaper Figure, 1994

Making Profiles in Russian way.

The Day of Press, The Day of "Pravda" Creating Profiles of Contemporaries

Newspaper Flowers

The Supremacist Newspapers. Municipal Exhibition Hall  A 3,
Moscow 1992

Censorship. 1992