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The Nadja Brykina Gallery was founded in central Zurich in 2006 by Nadja Brykina. The repertoire focuses on Russian art from the second half of the 20th century up to present time.
Their works are displayed across more than 800 square metres. A repertoire, which once was only loosely shown to the public outside the Soviet Union has now been made accessible to the Western world.
All artists are dignified in retrospectives that depict their works of different periods. Since 1996, Nadja Häner-Brykina has been constantly releasing monographs, artists’ books and exhibition catalogues in four languages (German, English, French and Russian). Publications further include documentary films unravelling the artistic life of selected artists. The work exhibitions are complemented by photo exhibitions giving insight into their artistic world as well as cultural events, such as concerts and readings.
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Zurich Switzerland
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Address: Sihlstrasse 91 |
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| Phone: +41 44 222 05 05 |
| Fax: +41 44 222 05 07 |
| Website:
www.brykina.com |
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Gallery/Dealer Photos (16)
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The gallery proudly represents:
Marlen Spindler
Igor Vulokh
Vladimir Andreenkov
Aleksei Kamensky
Boris Otarov
Vladimir Soskiev
Yuri Zlotnikov
Valery Yurlov
Andrei Krasulin
Vladimir Yakovlev
Anatoly Zverev
as well as artists from a younger generation, such as:
Mikhail Krunov
Igor Novikov
The spectrum of their works ranges from painting to illustrations; from graphic works to sculptural pieces. Many of these artists rank among the non-conformists. They lived in the Soviet Union under desperate circumstances. In their isolation, they followed their own artistic pursuit. They did not join the ruling party nor their official art (social realism) nor did they join the politicising underground. In exchange, they renounced to acceptance. They put up with deprivation, or worse, persecution. Their non-conformism was absolute and was addressed not only to the Soviet ideology but to all attempts to affect the artistic works. Even with the emergence of the Perestroika they did not adapt to the vogue of the art market and remained true to their own artistic pursuit instead. |
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| 28.10. - 29.12.2011 Russia Today |
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2011
25.08. - 14.10.2011 Andrey Krasulin - Material. Process. Intuition
09.06. - 23.07.2011 Francisco Infante - Artefacts
31.03. - 28.05.2011 Yuri Zlotnikov "Movement. Space"
2010
12.01.2011 - 15.03.2011 Marlen Spindler "Portraits and Signs"
22.11.2010 - 23.12.2010 Moscow. Valery Yurlov "Diary of an artist"
27.10.2010 - 23.12.2010 Igor Novikov "Impression 100:50"
28.09.2010 - 10.11.2010 Moscow. Vladimir Andreenkov "New Constructions"
30.08.2010 - 12.09.2010 Moscow. Marlen Spindler "Logos and sketches"
26.08.2010 - 09.10.2010 Valery Yurlov "Diary of an artist"
11.03.2010 - 26.06.2010 Marlen Spindlers Russia
22.10.2009 - 19.02.2010 Boris Otarov Retrospection
2009
18.04.2009 - 23.09.2009 Russian Landscape - from realistic to abstract (Andreenkov Vladimir, Burliuk David, Drevin Alexander, Jukin Vladimir, Kamensky Alexei, Korobeinikov Evgenj, Krasulin Andrei, Krunov Mikhail, Maslov Vladimir, Matorin Mikhail, Schokhin Makarij, Spindler Marlen, Terpsichorov Nikolaj, Udaltsova Nadezhda, Vulokh Igor, Zverev Anatoly Cholodovskaja Natalja)
13.03.2009 - 20.03.2009 Family Exhibition Andreenkov (Vladimir Andreenkov, N...[ Read all ] |
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| Location And Getting There |
Nadja Brykina Gallery ZURICH:
Address:
Sihlstrasse 91, CH-8001 Zurich, Switzerland
Tel.: +41 44 222 05 05
Opening hours:
Tuesday — Friday from 1 pm till 6 pm
Saturday from 11 am till 5 pm
Nadja Brykina Gallery MOSCOW:
Address:
Myasnitskaja 24, 101000 Moscow, Russia
Tel.: +7 495 669 17 34
Opening hours:
by appointment
Please visit our homepage: www.brykina.com
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| Nadja Brykina, Anna Brouver, Peter Erni & Christof Gähwiler |
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Tuesday - Friday from 1 p.m. till 6 p.m.
Saturday from 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. |
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