Gogolfest

GOGOLFEST

Festival Logo
Genre theater, music, film, literature, visual art
Dates usually September
Location(s) Kiev, Ukraine Ukraine
Years active 2007–present
Founded by Vladislav Troitskyi
Website
gogolfest.org.ua/eng
Garry Cobain of The Future Sound of London performing during GOGOLFEST-2009.

GOGOLFEST (Ukrainian: Гогольфест) is an annual multidisciplinary international festival of contemporary art and cinema in Kiev, Ukraine, dedicated to the famous writer Nikolai Gogol. The festival showcases theater, music, film, literature and visual art.[1][2][3]

Background

GOGOLFEST was founded in 2007 on the private initiative of Vladislav Troitskyi, director and producer of the DAKh Center for Contemporary Art. The co-founder of the Festival and Chairman of its Board of Trustees is Evgeni Utkin, a prominent Ukrainian IT entrepreneur. Ukrainian-Russian writer Nikolai Gogol is the festival’s namesake.

In accordance with contemporary trends, the festival is held in venues unaccommodated for traditional art. The festival emphasizes five types of art: theater, music, film, literature, and visual art. There is also a history of collaboration between artistic mediums at the festival; for instance, audiovisual presentations are especially common, as well as collaborations with scientists. (For example, engineers from Lithuania’s Cyland Laboratory have taken part in exhibits.) The festival is generally held in September. For example, the dates for Gogolfest 2013 were September 13 to 22, 2013.

Gogolfest often focuses on short films, though full-length films have also been featured at the festival. The films featured are often international in scope and experimental in subject matter. Previous examples of film series have included “The Long Night of German Shorts,” a selection of critically acclaimed films from Germany.[4] Theater also has a significant place in the events of Gogolfest, as well as a role in the ongoing re-invention of Ukrainian theater. Troitskiy, in an interview, described Gogolfest as seeking to extract Ukrainian theater from the tradition of Russian theater, so it can “stand on its own.”[5] Indeed, the festival has consistently had specially Ukrainian theater showcases. The festival is, however, committed to artistic diversity and has also produced the plays of Russian, Italian, Spanish, Swiss and Hungarian theatres. Some of the works shown at Gogolfest include “Gloria” a theatrical performance by Ukrainian director Alla Fedoryshyna, which used traditional Ukrainian folk music on the background, and depicted scenes from regular life in Ukraine: birth, marriage and death.

The festival has often included readings from contemporary authors. The festival has also included events to allow patrons access to publishing house representatives. For example, a lecture was given at Gogolfest 2013 by Ukrainian publishing house “Dukh I Litera.” “Dukh i Litera” has published more than 300 books. Most significant were editions of various foreign writers, among others Paul Riceour, Hanna Arendt, Michel de Montaigne, Blaise Pascal, Sergey Averintsev, Charles Taylor, Reinhart Koselleck, Elie Wiesel, as well as Ukrainian authors Ivan Dzyuba, Mykhaylyna Kotsyubyns’ka, Viktor Malakhov, Maryna Novikova, Myron Petrovs’kyi, Vadym Skurativs’kyi, among others.[6]

Gogolfest has a long tradition of visual art. Indeed, the founder of the festival Vladislav Troitsky is Director and Head of the DAKh Centre of Contemporary Art, one of the foremost arts exhibition organizations in Kiev. This tradition likewise includes street art. Examples include street artist duo Roti and Kislow’s mural, created explicitly for the festival.[7]

History

Date Place Headliners Audience Features
September 7–14, 2007 "Artistic Arsenal" CCA "DAKh", "Kyiv Soloists" Chamber Ensemble 10 000 Establishment in Ukraine of the first annual festival of contemporary art
May 7–25, 2008 "Artistic Arsenal" Composer V. Martynov, T. Hrindenko with "OPUS-POSTH" Ensemble, E. Gromov, Dmitry Pokrovsky Ensemble and St. Nikolsky Choir of the Tretyakov Gallery, "Volkov Trio", Alla Zagaykevych, St. Petersburg Engineering Theatre "AXE","LaboraToria", D. Ilyes Hungarian Peoples Theatre (Berehove), Studio "Sounddrama", "Kyiv Modern Ballet" 50 000 GOGOLFEST collaborates with other festivals, including "Sheshory", "Land of Dreams", "Youth", "Open Night", "Step", "French Spring", Koktebel Jazz Festival, "Cathedral of Song" and others.
September 11–27, 2009 [8] "Artistic Arsenal" Performance of Dmitry Bogomazov's "Hamlet", tours of Perm "By the Bridge" Theatre, concert "Dreams of the lost road" with DakhaBrakha, concert from the organizers of the Moloko Music Fest (Adam Green's speech, Adanovsky, Tikkle Me and Sergei Babkin), electro-acoustic program from Alla Zagaykevych, performance from St. Petersburg band NOM, and a festival-closing show from the group "Picasso's Children". 120 000 Two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Gogol. For the first time, the Festival leaves the "Artistic Arsenal."
September 4–12, 2010 Dovzhenko Film Studios The opening performance took place on Kyiv's Independence Square on September 4, with "Multiverse", a joint project of Ukraine's "Dakh" Theatre and the Spanish theatre "La Fura Dels Baus", which opened the Olympic Games in Barcelona in 1992. The Festival offered a theatre programme (in addition to the Ukrainian theatre showcase), music, visual arts, literature and film programmes, as well as master classes given by invited artists. Headliner included Spanish Theatre La Fura Dels Baus, Finnish duo Kimmo Pohjonen Kluster, Italian theatre of athletic dance Kataklo, ethnic ensemble from Tuva (Russia) Huun-Huur-Tu, Russian chamber orchestra «Opus Posth.», Jazzsteppa, The Go! Team from UK. In May, the festival also took place in Perm.

Venues

The festival uses venues unaccommodated for traditional art. Before 2010, most of its events took place in Kiev at the Mystetskyi Arsenal Museum - a renovated 18th century fortified arsenal building. The event was held in the Artistic Arsenal in 2007, 2009, and 2010. The Artistic Arsenal was conceived of as the largest and most widespread exhibition venue and museum in Kiev. This is the official website’s statement on the future and expansion of the venue: “Mystetskyi Arsenal is already negotiating with the leading museums of Ukraine and the world in order to exhibit collections of art masterpieces in Ukraine, among them a big project on the heritage of Kazimir Malevich, international projects on contemporary art, exhibitions of works by Frida Kahlo, Edward Munch, Gustav Klimt, masters of the Austrian Secession, and Surrealist artists.”

In 2010, the festival moved to Dovzhenko Film Studios – named for the Ukrainian director Oleksander Dovzhenko and state-owned – and, in 2012 and 2013, to the Telichka Industrial Area. This is a decimated industrial zone, near the center of Kiev along the Dnieper River.

References

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