Lot 297
  • 297

Yuri Dyshlenko

Estimate
20,000 - 25,000 USD
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Description

  • Yuri Dyshlenko
  • Romance from the series SPIRITUS LOCI, 1980-1990
  • inscribed N21, #21 (36), Yuri Dyshlenko and dated 1990 (on the reverse)
  • acrylic on canvas
  • 43 3/4 by 34 in.
  • 111 by 86.5 cm

Provenance

Gregory Gallery, New York (acquired directly from the artist's estate)

Exhibited

New Brunswick, New Jersey, Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Yurii Dyshlenko: Modernity, Abstraction and Mass Media, October 2002-January 2003
Durham, North Carolina, Duke University Museum of Art, Yurii Dyshlenko: Modernity, Abstraction and Mass Media—Reformulating Modern Culture, 1998
New York, Phyllis Kind Gallery, Commemorating the Life and Career of Yuri Dyshlenko, 1995

Literature

Janet Kennedy, ed., Yurii Dyshlenko: Modernity, Abstraction and Mass Media, St. Petersburg: Palace Editions and the Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University, 2002,  p. 69, illustrated

Condition

Acrylic on canvas. The surface is a little dirty and there are a couple very minor stains. There is also very minor discoloration to the far edges of the composition, and there are a couple very minor horizontal lines across the center of the canvas. Appears in overall fine condition. Under UV no retouches are visible. Held in a modern wood frame. Unexamined out of frame.
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
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Catalogue Note

An important member of the Leningrad nonconformist art movement, Yuri Dyshlenko participated in the first unofficial art exhibition in Leningrad, held at the Gaz Palace of Culture in December 1974. However, he regarded the Moscow-based Conceptualists, a group of artists that conducted an ongoing critique of representational painting, as his closest contemporaries.

Dyshlenko received his formal art training at the Leningrad Institute of Theater, Music, and Cinematography with the eminent stage designer and theater director Nikolai Akimov. He graduated from the Institute in 1962 and worked as an illustrator before turning to painting in the early 1970s. The language and methods of advertising, the technology of reproduction—all this became a field for creative transformation and irony in Dyshlenko's works. To create his paintings, the artist employed motifs derived from advertising and other forms of popular culture, often including reproductions of slogans, product labels, and cartoons. From 1989, he lived and worked in New York.

It was in New York that Dyshlenko completed Spiritus Loci, a series that he had begun in Leningrad years earlier. As its title suggests, the series deals with matters of local interest: Spiritus Loci is rich in allusions to the history of St. Petersburg. The series' subtitle, 36 Views through the Window to Europe and Back, alludes to a cycle of woodcuts by the Japanese printmaker Hokusai (1760-1849). It also makes reference to the frequent description of St. Petersburg as Russia's "Window to the West." The scholar Janet Kennedy has described the series as follows: "Spiritus Loci is full of unstable illusions. These result in a visual embodiment of an established trope: St. Petersburg is a city founded on illusion, the acme of artificiality, a city whose grand facades conceal the often makeshift nature of daily life."