AES+F

AES+F is a group of four Russian artists: Tatiana Arzamasova (1955), Lev Evzovich (1958), Evgeny Svyatsky (1957), and Vladimir Fridkes (1956). The group was formed in 1987 as AES by three artists: Tatiana Arzamasova, Lev Evzovich and Evgeny Svyatsky. Photographer Vladimir Fridkes joined the group in 1995, and the name of the group had been changed to AES+F. They live and work in Moscow. AES+F group focuses on photography, photo- and computer-based art, and video art, as well as using other traditional media such as drawing, painting and sculpture. Works of AES/AES+F was widely shown on many biennials (Venice, Lyon, Sydney, Gwangju, Moscow, Gothenburg, Havana, Tirana, Istanbul, Bratislava, Seoul etc.), ARS-06 (KIASMA, Helsinki) and big number of important group and solo shows worldwide, their works are in collection of main Russian national museums, museums in Europe such as The State Tretyakov Gallery (Moscow), The State Russian Museum (St.-Petersburg), Multimedia Art Center (Moscow), Moderna Museet (Stockholm), MEP (Paris), les Abattoirs (Toulouse), FNAC (Paris), Center Pompidou (Paris), Museum of Contemporary Art (Belgrade), Goetz Collection (Munich) etc.

The group's video "Last Riot," shown at the 2007 Venice Biennale, shows an imagined future digitally manipulated where snow capped mountains sit next to desolate beaches, neon dragons rest atop oil platforms, planes collide without flames, and a band of attractive teens enact violence on one another without consequence.[1] Their 2009 work "The Feast of Trimalchio" featured at the 17th Sydney Biennale.[2] The description of the video can be found here. In 2011 AES+F presented a new project «Allegoria Sacra» (a third part of trilogy started by «Last Riot») in Multimedia Art Museum Moscow as a special project of 4th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art.

AES+F is represented by the Triumph Gallery in Moscow; by the Volker Diehl Gallery in Berlin; by the Noire Contemporary Art in Turin; by th Anna Schwartz Gallery in Melbourne and Sydney; by the Hans Knoll Gallery in Vienna and Budapest; by the Ruzicska Gallery in Salzburg; by the SEM-Art Gallery in Monaco; by the Charlotte Moser Gallery in Geneva; by the Arario Beijing Gallery in China; by the Loop Gallery in South Korea; by the Art Statements Gallery in Hong Kong and Tokyo; by the Juan Ruiz Gallery in Venezuela.

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