Exhibition

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Regeneratrix at Marlborough Gallery London
Feb
8
to Mar 23

Regeneratrix at Marlborough Gallery London

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For her first solo exhibition in the UK, Regeneratrix, Bay Area artist Yulia Pinkusevich (b. 1982 Kharkiv, Ukraine) will present recent paintings from two ongoing bodies of work, The Sakha Series and The Isorithm Series, which excavate the layers of her cultural identity as a former citizen of the USSR. The Sakha Series depicts the artist's journey through time, meditating upon the connection with her ancient Eastern European and North Asian lineage to explore spirituality as a source of lifeforce. The latest large-scale paintings focus on the existence of our non-human kin, particularly embodying the essence of elements such as fire, water, and air. Accompanying The Sakha Series are works from The Isorithm Series. In these works, Pinkusevich draws on her Ukrainian and Russian identity and personal experience of growing up in the USSR at the end of the Cold War, as well as the current Russian invasion of Ukraine. Her mark-marking is guided by gestures and physical movements that react to and synthesize the complex relationship between these two countries.

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Wind Over Water
Sep
11
to Oct 23

Wind Over Water

R O U N D  W E A T H E R

Wind over Water 

 September 3 - October 23, 2021

 Reception: Saturday September 11, 3-6 PM

Wind over Water is an exhibition that considers art as a meditation device and/or spiritual practice.  It includes meditative works by Shelley HoytRumi KoshinoMaisin artistsNkiruka Oparah,

Yulia PinkusevichJesse SchlesingerElizabeth SimsAndrew SungtaekPaul Taylor, and

Rosie Lee Tompkins.

The exhibit’s title takes inspiration in the above artwork by Colter Jacobsen.  He focuses our attention onto how the words and ideas for WindWaterMind, and Matter mirror each other, resulting in a pulsing of being, an evocation of spiritually- or metaphysically-infused highlights of language and visual art.  Gabriela Gonzalez Leal writes, "I look at art as a vehicle for meditation. [...] It leads the viewer to reflect on other realities."  Reflect on other realities, the artists of Wind over Water do.  As well as meditate upon the one at hand. 

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Calm Under the Waves in The Blue of My Oblivion
Feb
19
to Apr 18

Calm Under the Waves in The Blue of My Oblivion

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Calm Under the Waves in the Blue of My Oblivion

a virtual exhibition by Yulia Pinkusevich

February 19 - April 18, 2021

Artist Talk & Opening Reception: February 19 at 12pm PST

Zoom Meeting ID: 869 9420 6840   PW: 977361

Artist Workshop: March 12 at 12pm PST

Please contact Michelle Ramin, Director of Archer Gallery, for inquiries. 360.992.2246 | www.clark.edu/archergallery | mramin@clark.edu

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Rupture of the Mundane Plane at Qualia Contemporary
Feb
11
to Apr 2

Rupture of the Mundane Plane at Qualia Contemporary




Yulia Pinkusevich,  Isorithm IV, 2018, Ink, charcoal, pencil and beeswax on Fabriano Artistico soft press paper. 

Yulia Pinkusevich, Isorithm IV, 2018, Ink, charcoal, pencil and beeswax on Fabriano Artistico soft press paper. 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Yulia Pinkusevich: Rupture of the Mundane Plane

February 11, 2021 through April 2, 2021

(Palo Alto, CA) - Qualia Contemporary Art is pleased to present Rupture of the Mundane Plane by artist Yulia Pinkusevich. Rupture of the Mundane Plane showcases two recent bodies of work on paper from two series: Isorithm Maps and a new body of work entitled the Q-Series.  In her evolving practice, Pinkusevich has created a bold, visual language that engages interconnection, musicality, space and materiality to explore the transference of energy over time. Rupture of the Mundane Plane contextualizes this ethos through an arresting juxtaposition of meditation, intuitive spontaneity, and gestural mark making. The exhibition is open to the public from February 11, 2021 through April 2, 2021. The gallery will be hosting a Zoom opening celebration on February 13, at 7:30 pm PST. RSVP is required. To RSVP, please visit http://www.qualiacontemporaryart.com/

The Isorithm series grew out of Pinkusevich’s research on the Cold War. During this research, the artist located a declassified military manual which served as a guide to teach military personnel how to create maps that predict the casualty impact of nuclear air bursts . Pinkusevich was struck “by the immense tension between the elegant geometries and rational calculations of these maps, juxtaposed against the irrational chaos and mass destruction they represent.” The works are made up of a series of red lined grids, overlayed with topography like concentric circles and abstracted marks; all melding together in a seemingly rhythmic dance. The term 'isorhythm” is borrowed from a 13th-century musical phrase used to describe things of the same rhythm. The repetitive mapping quality of the work instantiates the exchange of energy within it, both physically and conceptually. Without knowing the work’s nuclear source, one is still able to sense its buzzing energy, ready to explode with life.

Pinkusevich’s Q-Series began while the artist was in quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic. The small, amoebic works are made using a slow meditative process in which the artist places a single ink mark  on the paper for every breath she takes. Pinkusevich then connects these marks with fine red pencil lines as a meditation on form, social connection and biological networks. The intimate works follow an internal logic and poses a scientific visual language. Just like a physical body, they have the ability to heal, grow and regenerate a sense of being. 

Pinkusevich uses materiality and process in her practice as a way to expand on the interconnectedness and historical aspects often found in her work. Both series in Rupture the Mundane Plane use a preservation technique the artist discovered while working with 12th century illuminated manuscripts, in which natural beeswax was used to seal  the drawings and texts. Pinkusevich not only uses beeswax as a way to seal her marks, but it also adds an interesting depth of color and a natural fragrance. All of the materials Pinkusevich uses (charcoal, ink, paper, beeswax), have a primordial feeling to them and physically connect the work to different spaces, times and energy.

The work in Rupture of the Mundane Plane is mathematical, algorithmic, geometric, all of which acts as a set of rules that guides Pinkusevich through her process. Within these limitations, Pinkusevich is able to find metaphysical networks of life, connection, rhythm, emotion and spontaneity.

About Yulia Pinkusevich 

Yulia Pinkusevich is an artist and educator born in Kharkov, Ukraine (USSR). Upon the collapse of the Soviet Union, her family fled the eastern bloc as refugees, immigrating to New York City in the 90’s. She holds a Masters of Fine Arts from Stanford University and Bachelors of Fine Arts from Rutgers University, Mason Gross School of the Arts, graduating both universities with highest honors. Yulia has exhibited nationally and internationally including site-specific projects executed in Paris, France and Buenos Aires, Argentina. 

Presenting an immersive visual environment that stays true to an architectural design methodology is an ongoing pursuit for Pinkusevich. It is ever present in her installations using common materials and found objects, it is how she guides her examination of urban and natural systems. Pinkusevich’s work is in the public collection of the DeYoung Museum, Stanford University, Facebook HQ, Google HQ and the City of Albuquerque. Yulia has been awarded residency grants from Gray Area Arts Foundation, Wildlands, Lucid Arts Foundation, Autodesk Pier 9, Facebook, Recology (San Francisco Dump), Cite des Arts International (Paris), Headlands Center for the Arts, Redux, Goldwell Open Air Museum and The Wurlitzer Foundation. She was also the recipient of The San Francisco Foundations Phelan, Murphy & Cadogan Fellowship in the Fine Arts as well as numerous other awards. Yulia’s work has been widely written about in various publications, including New American Painting, Stanford Magazine, DeYoung Magazine, VICE, The Miami Herald, Dwell, Adbusters, KQED, Rhizome. Yulia has lectured at Stanford University and is currently Associate Professor at Mills College in Oakland California, she lives and creates her work on unceded Ohlone land. 

About Qualia Contemporary Art

Located in the heart of downtown Palo Alto, Qualia Contemporary Art is dedicated to showcasing outstanding established and emerging artists working in a variety of media. The gallery is committed to building lasting relationships with artists, collectors, curators, and scholars nationally and internationally, and providing a vital platform for dialogues on contemporary art and culture in the Bay Area and beyond.



Location

328 University Ave

Palo Alto, CA 94301



Gallery Contact 

Dacia Xu

650-656-9132

dacia@qualiagallery.com



Media Contact

Lainya Magaña, A&O PR 

347 395 4155 

lainya@aopublic.com



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Where the Heart Is: Contemporary Art by Immigrant Artists
Feb
2
to Apr 3

Where the Heart Is: Contemporary Art by Immigrant Artists

Artist Talk at PAAC via ZOOM

Palo Alto Art Center:

On Friday, March 12, 5 pm.—Yulia Pinkusevich will speak via Zoom about her work. Register here.

This exhibition will feature artists who have immigrated to the United States and whose experiences are reflected in their art practice. There are more foreign-born residents in Santa Clara County (of which Palo Alto is a part) than in any other county in California, about 38% of the population. In a state that has more immigrants than any other (in fact, half of California children have at least one immigrant parent) and a country than has a larger immigrant population than any other in the world, this is a truly meaningful statistic and one we choose not to ignore.

For those of us who have never known what it feels like to be treated as an “other,” the artists in this exhibition have done us a great service. By examining and expressing their experiences, they help us to be more compassionate, more knowledgeable citizens. In the midst of the confusion and outrage permeating immigration policy today, one thing is abundantly clear: these artists have a tremendous amount to add to the cultural and artistic prosperity of our nation.

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Calm Under The Waves In the Blue of My Oblivion @ Archer Gallery, Clark College
Jan
27
12:00 AM00:00

Calm Under The Waves In the Blue of My Oblivion @ Archer Gallery, Clark College


Sakha Mother Spirit (Aiy Aisyt), Charcoal, pastel and pencil on paper over birch panel, 74” x 44”, 2020

Sakha Mother Spirit (Aiy Aisyt), Charcoal, pastel and pencil on paper over birch panel, 74” x 44”, 2020

For Immediate Release  

January 25, 2021 

Clark College’s Archer Gallery presents 

Calm Under the Waves in the Blue of My Oblivion  

a virtual exhibition by Yulia Pinkusevich 

Exhibition dates: February 19, 2021 - April 18, 2021 

Artist Talk & Opening Reception: February 19, 12pm Pacific Time 

Artist Workshop: March 12, 12pm Pacific Time 

All events are open to the public and will be held virtually via Zoom (links TBA at website below). For more details, and to view Calm Under the Waves, please visit: www.archergallery.space 

Artist Statement: 

In this time of great division and uncertainty, I find myself longing for unity, embracing feminine intuition, and looking for  answers from ancient wisdom. Last year, I learned that my maternal ancestors were indigenous Siberians who (likely)  practiced forms of shamanism in the Sakha region of Russia. Siberia is one of the richest areas of biodiversity, known for  its harsh climate and extreme landscapes. I spent my childhood summers in these environments with my grandparents -  but because native Siberians were brought to the brink of extinction by white Russian settlers in the nineteenth century,  very little indigenous culture remained there by the time I was a child. When Stalin's regime then systematically purged  shamanism (and all other religions) in the 1920s, a multigenerational amnesia around native heritage and sacred  practices afflicted the region. For my family, this amnesia left only the remnants of what seemed like strange, forgotten  superstitions. 
 

Seeking to both reconnect with my lost heritage and contribute towards healing the planet, I began to learn about Earth  Living Systems and Gaia Theory, scientific insights built upon indigenous cultural knowledge, the practice of bio  regeneration, and sustainable land stewardship. This ongoing project, including Calm Under the Waves, has led me to  expand my knowledge and reframe my own beliefs about thriving pre-colonial civilizations. The Sakha series depicts my  own journey through time, meditating upon my connection with an ancient Siberian lineage and exploring the spirituality  of my ancestors as a source of inspiration and life. 


Yulia Pinkusevich, Sakha Mother Spirit (Aiy Aisyt), Charcoal, pastel and pencil on paper over birch panel, 74” x 44”, 2020. 

Please contact Michelle Ramin, Director of Archer Gallery, for inquiries. 

360.992.2246 | www.clark.edu/archergallery | mramin@clark.edu



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END OF YOU at Gray Area Arts Foundation
Feb
12
to Mar 1

END OF YOU at Gray Area Arts Foundation

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Behind the scenes look at Yulia's Project The Luxuriant Prolific Undying

A NEW IMMERSIVE ART EXPERIENCE
COMING FEBRUARY 7, 2020

 

Reimagine your relationship with the living world — and make the planetary personal.
 

Limited number of time slots are available for the Opening Weekend. 

GET TICKETS

This exhibition is a production by the Experiential Space Research Lab at Gray Area, supported by Knight Foundation. In collaboration with Gaian Systems, the Research Lab supports a diverse team of artists exploring the potential of experiential spaces for social impact. 

Artists: Brenda (Bz) Zhang, Celeste Martore, Jonathon Keats, Kelly Skye, Kevin Bernard Moultrie Daye, Orestis Herodotou, Rena Tom, Romie Littrell, Stephanie Andrews, Stephen Standridge, and Yulia Pinkusevich.

LEARN MORE

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Between Them: An Installation Composed of Drawings
Jul
13
to Aug 17

Between Them: An Installation Composed of Drawings

Between Them: An Installation Composed of Drawings
13 July - 17 August, 2019


Opening reception: Saturday, July 13 from 4 - 6 PM

Ten of my works on paper are a part of this unique exhibition featuring close to 200 drawings spanning the 16th to 21st centuries from European Old Masters to work made utilizing technology, from South American geometric abstraction to photo-realism, drawing directly on the wall, drawing on three-dimensional objects, drawings made only of paper and one drawn both with and on graphite, this is an exploration of the intimacy, immediacy and pleasure of drawing. 

More details about this exhibition can be found here. 

Artists include Ruth Asawa, Antonio Asis, Chris Ballantyne, Rina Banerjee, Robert Bechtle, Judith Belzer, Dike Blair, Michael Buthe, Alexander Calder, Alessandro Casolini, Max Cole, Tyrell Collins, Bruce Conner, Jonathan Delafield Cook, Russell Crotty, Reed Danziger, Hugo de Marziani, Jay DeFeo, Gustavo Díaz, Fortunato Duranti, Jacob El Hanani, Nicole Phungrasamee Fein, León Ferarri, Roland Flexner, Gajin Fujita, Alicia Mihai Gazcue, Alberto Giacometti, Max Gimblett, Nancy Graves, Zarina Hashmi, Tim Hawkinson, Eva Hesse, Kein Imao, Chusei Inagaki, Colter Jacobsen, Jacob Jordaens, Yokoi Kinkoku, Isabella Kirkland, David Klamen, Stefan Kürten, Crystal Liu, Antonio Lizárraga, José Antonio Suárez Londoño, Claire Lukas, Emil Lukas, Marco Maggi, Gerhard Mayer, Tyeb Mehta, Nasreen Mohamedi, John O’Reilly, Maruyama Okyo, Gabriel Orozco, Driss Ouadahi, Nam June Paik, Giovanni Battista Paggi, Raymond Pettibon, Yulia Pinkusevich, Liliana Porter, Ken Price, Angelina Pwerle, Lordy Rodriguez, Nagasawa Rosetsu, Ed Ruscha, Fred Sandback, Andrew Schoultz, Shahzia Sikander, Mark Tansey, Paul Thek, Ana Tiscornia, Ignacio Uriarte, Cornelius Völker, William T. Wiley, Hannah Wilke and William Wood.

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Built Environments:
Feb
23
to Apr 4

Built Environments:

  • San Francisco State Univeristy, Fine Arts Gallery (map)
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BUILT ENVIRONMENTS

February 23 – April 4, 2019

Opening Reception: Saturday, February 23rd, 1–3pm

The exhibition examines artistic interventions both inside and outside of the gallery space, where spatial relations and the routine materials of architecture and construction are exploded through artistic experimentation. Featuring: Sheila Ghidini, Bessma Khalaf, Mary Anne Kluth, Beth Krebs, Lead Pencil Studio, Cyble Lyle, MACRO WAVES, Sung Eun Park, Nate Petterson, Yulia Pinkusevich, Stephanie Robison, Andrew Schoultz, Clint Sleeper, and Patrick D. Wilson.

Organized by Sharon E. Bliss and Kevin B. Chen

PLEASE NOTE: THE GALLERY WILL BE CLOSED ON MARCH 27, 28 AND 29 FOR THE SFSU SPRING RECESS.


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Double Vision at Fort Gorges + Orbis Edition Publication
Oct
13
1:00 PM13:00

Double Vision at Fort Gorges + Orbis Edition Publication

A collaboration with Andrea Steves and Francois Hughes, Double Vision explores the Cold War history of the Nike Missile Program and its counterparts in the USSR. The project began in the Bay Area’s Marin Headlands, which is home to the Nike Missile Battery, part of a nationwide nuclear missile defense system active from 1951 to 1972. The ongoing project gathers materials from former Nike veterans and archives to create interactive experiences using low power FM transmission and video installation at a variety of former military sites.

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"Stones Unturned" at Black Crown Gallery
Jun
30
to Aug 5

"Stones Unturned" at Black Crown Gallery

Stones Unturned

Solo exhibition at Black Crown Gallery, Oakland 

June 30 - August 5, 2017

The Recollection of Stones Unturned is a solo exhibition of “hybrid paintings” by Yulia Pinkusevich that examine the collaboration between humans and machines in these early days of extraterrestrial exploration. Drawing upon photographs taken by autonomous robots from the Martian surface and employing the latest laser-based technologies as a tool for creating, Pinkusevich considers the position of humankind in a present in which speculative fictions are becoming technological realities—our machine-aided capabilities expanding the reach of our species in both space and time.

Central to Pinkusevich’s work is the pivotal moment in which robots—as proxies for humans—began simultaneously making photographs of and altering the terrain of Mars. The resulting images gaze back into the deep time of extraterrestrial geologies—landscapes formed over the course of eons—while the interventions look forward as the starting point of a possible future of human interplanetary colonization. These excavations into the Martian ground are echoed in the process of creating these “hybrid paintings”; Pinkusevich employs laser cutters to etch through layers of hand-applied acrylic paint, each pass revealing a new color and further resolving the image. The etched surface of the resulting works begin to take on a topographic dimension, visually paralleling the landscapes depicted. In completing the pieces by drawing over and under the paint surface with colored pastels, Pinkusevich recapitulates the human-machine authorship of the original photographs.

For many of the works on display artifact takes on a dual presence: the image itself as an artifact of contemporary technology, produced in part for the consideration of future generations; and digital artifacts evident as errors, inclusions and blank spots as a result of the many transmissions and translations that the photographic images are subjected to between exposure and painting. The binary presence of artifact speaks to the imprecise translation from technologically-produced data to human experience, and the impossibility of projecting with any clarity the future of humanity.

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"Everybody's Ocean" at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art
Dec
19
to Apr 19

"Everybody's Ocean" at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art

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Everybody’s Ocean

Santa Cruz Museum of Art

December 19, 2014 – April 19, 2015


Open to the public December 19th
Opening reception: 
January 2nd 5-9 PM with special performances by Henry Kaiser, Kadet Kuhne, Elia Vargas and Jason Wyman. Find out more here.

Everybody’s Ocean works just like our relationship to the ocean: it constantly evolves. The ocean represents anything from womb to tomb. We personify it as a wrathful god, a seductive spirit, or an indomitable force. The four oceans of the world cover 71% of the Earth’s surface and link us to primordial pasts. The ocean is a living, shared space and one of the greatest unexplored mysteries of the world. Everybody interprets the ocean in different ways. Your work has unique inspiration. Let’s share it with each other.

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"Thresholds: Shadow Self" at Alter Space
Mar
15
to Mar 29

"Thresholds: Shadow Self" at Alter Space

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ALTER SPACE PRESENTS Thresholds: Shadow Self by Yulia Pinkusevich

March 15 – 29, 2014
OPENING: March 15, 2014 from 7-10pm
A.I.R Exhibition

Thresholds: Shadow Self, is a site-specific installation by Yulia Pinkusevich, located in the
basement of the gallery. Pinkusevich has embedded an architecturally scaled structure into the existing space that explores notions of shadow, light, barrier and threshold. Utilizing 30+
reclaimed doors that she collected during her time at RecologySF (SF Dump), this immersive
environment aims to evoke personal inquiry and examination, prompting visitors to embark in an act of investigation as they navigate the maze-like arrangement through its series of doors.

Pinkusevich’s Thresholds is inspired by the Jungian philosophy of shadow, that which hides in the subconscious darkness of the human psyche. Even though the shadow exists in the psyche, waiting to reveal itself through human action, it seldom manifests in real life. This installation creates a dialogue with the body that is aimed at prompting a deeper awareness of the journey into one’s self, shining light on dark corners of the psyche while playing with the viewers perceptions of space.

Art’s not psychology, some art can be psychological but I don’t claim to be able to solve
people’s problems through an installation. I do hope it makes you ponder a bit or think about
why- I think art is meant to be an experience, I control certain aspects of it but I can’t control
how it’s perceived, that belongs to the audience.

Yulia Pinkusevich is an interdisciplinary visual artist. Born in 1982 in Kharkov, Ukraine she holds a Masters of Fine Arts from at Stanford University and Bachelors of Fine Arts from Rutgers University Mason Gross School of the Arts. Yulia has been awarded residency grants from Recology (SF Dump), Cite des Arts International in Paris, Headlands Center for the Arts, Redux in South Carolina, Goldwell Open Air Museum and The Wurlitzer Foundation. She received The San Francisco Foundations 2011 Phelan, Murphy & Cadogan Fellowship in the Fine Arts as well as Stanford University SiCA’s Spark and ASSU Grants. She currently lectures at Stanford University and resides in East Palo Alto, California.

MORE INFO

http://alterspace.co

http://alterspace.co/the-jail-cell/

Alter Space 1158 Howard St San Francisco CA

GALLERY HOURS Thursday – Saturday, 1-6pm or by appointment, contact@alterspace.co

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