Andre Molodkin's CRUDE at Station Museum of Contemporary Art opening Nov. 5; on view through Feb. 12, 2012
Opening Saturday, November 5th, 2011 @ 7pm
Featuring the music of Mariachi Las Coronelas de Vanessa Del Fierro
Exhibition will be on view through February 12, 2012
There are no obvious routes of escape, no happy endings on offer.
- Morning Star
For the first time in the history of Houston, Station Museum of
Contemporary Art will host an art exhibition that explores oil, the
viscous black gold pumping through the heart of the city’s economy. On
November 5th, 2011 the Russian born artist Andrei Molodkin will open
CRUDE.
Since the discovery of Spindletop oil field in 1901, Texas has witnessed
an extraordinary surge in petroleum production that revolutionized
American industry, surpassing even that of the previously unrivalled
Russian Empire. With Russia now in its post-Communist era, the ex-Soviet
soldier will reveal the social, political and economic trajectories at
the core of every capitalist society.
Culture is an emptiness we have to fill and affirm with economics.
It turns out there is no art, no culture, nothing but economics. -
A. Molodkin
The goal of Station Museum is ‘to encourage the public’s awareness of
the cultural, political, economic, and personal dimensions of art.’
Pushing this to its limits, Molodkin will exhibit the most demanding and
forthright of his recent work. On display will be intoxicating
sculptures made from transparent acrylic blocks and hollowed into
negative spaces. DEMOCRACY, JUSTICE, HUMAN RIGHTS; are examples of
utopian words previously requisitioned by Molodkin, all oozing with the
noxious, black matter. Canvases created from vast quantities of biro
pens will feature frenzied manifestations of the artist’s deepest
frustrations.
Dualism is at play, as the viewer is at once faced with the
juxtapositions of life and death, need and desire, opportunity and
greed.
He’s tackling something so real, so blatant and so obvious that it
needs no metaphorical description to bring its un- niceties to our
attention. – Art Review
Andrei Molodkin is known internationally for his socio-political
projects. At the 53rd Venice Biennale, the artist exhibited his
installation Le Rouge et le Noir in the Russian pavilion. Chechen oil
and the blood from wounded soldiers pumped through two replicas of the
Louvre’s Nike of Samothrace; paradoxically Gazprom, one of the largest
energy companies in the world, sponsored the pavilion.
Maybe I also will be corrupted by oil. Everyone who works with oil
begins to be corrupted by its power. – A. Molodkin
Artist biography
Andrei Molodkin was born 1966 in Boui, North Russia and graduated from
the Department of Architecture and Industrial Design at Stroganov
Institute, Moscow in 1992. Whilst studying he also served in the Soviet
Army, convoying missiles through Siberia. In the freezing temperatures,
Molodkin would rub oil over his body to provide the warmth to keep
himself alive. Oil became his source of survival, yet he was always
acutely aware of the corruption and exploitation embedded in its very
substance. Throughout Molodkin’s remarkable career, he continues to
explore the connotations of oil in a myriad of high-profile
socio-political contexts.
"All my work is political. Russian contemporary art is lost in
translation and that is why my art is direct, like that of the
Avant-Garde. Unmasking is an ambition of the Avant-Garde and the Avant-
Garde is something new that arises from the decomposing old. From the
oldest of the oldest oil."
- Andrei Molodkin
From an interview with DAZED DIGITAL (www.dazeddigital.com)
Read more of the interview
Currently Andrei Molodkin’s TRANSFORMER No. V579 exhibition takes place
at the Art Sensus Gallery until
17th December 2011
