Taras Polataiko Exhibit
Barbara Edwards Contemporary is pleased to announce
the solo exhibition of renowned krainian
Canadian artist Taras Polataiko.
Since his arrival in Canada in 1989, Polataiko has
garnered increasing international
attention for his provocative and conceptually rigorous artist Taras
Polataikort works that often concern notions of rupture and repair. This
exhibition highlights two distinct trends in Polataiko’s practice: the
photography series Human Locomotion continues his work with symbolic moments in
the history of art and representation, while the projects Kyiv Classical and In
the Land of the Head Hunters express his
deep concerns with cultural oppression and historical erasure.
Kyiv Classical details the artist's inquiry into the
disappearance of a commemorative plaque marking the site in Bad Ems, Germany
where in 1876 Russian Czar Alexander II signed a secret
edict banning the use of the Ukrainian language. Using glow in the dark paint, black light and a recorded
song by a canary specially bred by Ukrainian ornithologists, Polataiko calls
attention to the plaque’s absence and the city’s seeming indifference to this aspect of its history. In
the Land of the Head Hunters was made in collaboration with the Kwakiutl Band Council, and records a screening of
Edward Curtis’ eponymous 1914 film for the descendants of the cast. Curtis
hired Kwakiutl people to enact a
fictional pre-contact narrative and perform dances and ceremonies that were
outlawed under the Indian Act, [amended in 1885]. Polataiko, taken by the fact
that after it was created the film was never shown to the community, plans the first
screening with the Band and documents the event. In both Kyiv Classical and In
the Land of the Head Hunters, Polataiko revisits the site of displacement,
investigating the ideological forces that effect what remains and what is
erased fromhistorical memory.
Taras Polataiko, “Artist as Politician: In the Shadow
of the Monument,” 1995, cibachrome print documenting the 1992 performance by
Taras Polataiko, 92.8 x 59.3 cm, Saskatchewan Arts Board Permanent CollectionIn
Human Locomotion, models re-enact poses from Eadweard Muybridge’s iconic
stop-motion project (1887).
Whereas Muybridge used a rapid shutter speed to freeze
his subjects’ natural motions, Polataiko asks his models to hold in-between, unbalanced
positions. Captured using long exposures, the blurred results record the
tensions in the models’ bodies. Through this inversion, Polataiko addresses the
conditioning of humanity by technological progress - the invention of the
motion picture irrevocably changing the way we perceive ourselves in time.
Polataiko’s public exhibitions include: Ukrainian
Institute of America (New York); Knstlerhaus
Schlo Balmoral (Frankfurt, Germany); Center for Contemporary Art (Warsaw, Poland);
Soros International
Center for Contemporary Art (Kyiv, Ukraine); Art Gallery of Hamilton; Museum of Contemporary
Canadian Art; Muse d’Art Contemporain; Winnipeg Art Gallery; Museum London
[Ontario]; MacMaster Art Gallery; Artspeak Gallery; Art Gallery of Greater
Victoria; MacKenzie Art Gallery; Dunlop Art Gallery; Mendel Art Gallery (all Canada);
Antoni Tapies Foundation (Barcelona, Spain); CAAM (Las Palmas, Spain), Artspace
(Sydney, Australia); National Museum of Contemporary Art (Belgrade, Serbia) and
the National Museum of Art (Lithuania).
In 2002, Polataiko represented Ukraine at the 25th So Paulo Biennale and in
2009 he participated in the International Incheon Biennale in South Korea and Volta 5: Age of Anxiety in Basel, Switzerland.
His upcoming exhibitions include Priska C. Juschka Fine Art (New York),
Pulse Miami and Galerie U7 (Frankfurt).
He is currently based in Vancouver.
Exhibition of photography and works by Taras Polataiko
runs at Barbara Edwards Contemporary, 1069
Bathurst Street in Toronto until January 9. Gallery hours are
Wednesday to Saturday 11am. to 6pm.
For more information, call 647-348-5110 or email
barbara@becontemporary