Anastasia Ryabova | |
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Born | 1985 Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Alma mater | Master of Philosophy, National Research University Higher School of Economics |
Known for | New media art, Installation art |
Awards | Kandinsky Prize in media projects, 2011; Soratnik awards laureate, 2011 |
Website | http://nastyaryabova.com |
Anastasia Ryabova (Russian: Анастасия Рябова; born 1985) is a contemporary artist who won the 2011 Kandinsky Prize in media projects for her work, Artist's Private Collections, a virtual "museum of contemporary art based on artists' private collections".[1] She is known for works that play "linguistic games."[2] She was also the Soratnik awards laureate for 2011.[3] Her art has been exhibited in Russia, Austria, Italy, and Germany.[4]
In 2015, she was included in the list of promising young artists of Russia according to Forbes, and in 2017 in the TOP 100 young authors according to InArt.[5][6]
She holds a Master of Philosophy from the National Research University Higher School of Economics.[7]
Born in 1985 in Moscow. The creator of “Artist's Private Collections”[8] is an online archive of works of contemporary art from private collections of artists. The site project “Artist's Private Collections” was carried out with the initial financial support of the Victoria Foundation and the Sandretto Re Rebaoudengo Foundation in the framework of the Russian-Italian exhibition Modernikon.[9] One of the authors of the magazine.biz project, an online store where you can’t buy anything (all products are painted by artists Alexei Buldakov, Alexandra Galkina, Alisa Yoffe, Zhanna Kadyrova, Viktor Makarov, Lena Martynova, Maxim Roganov, Anastasia Ryabova, David Ter-Oganyanom and Olga Chtak).[10]
In 2011, she was twice nominated for the Kandinsky Prize. For the prize of the young artist of the year, Anastasia Ryabova put on the plastic work “Where is your banner, dude?”, And for the prize “Project of the year in the field of media art” - her own no-art project “Artist's Private Collections”.[11] As a result, the artist won the second nomination and became the only woman to receive the Kandinsky Prize in the nomination “Project of the Year in the Field of Media Art”.
In 2011, she carried out the project “Artist's Ride Space”, arranging on her own bicycle, in a small “window” under the wheel, an art gallery of one work. During the year, the works of Alice Yoffe, Alexei Buldakov, Valery Chtak and other artists were exhibited there.[12]
In 2012, with the support of the Victoria Foundation, it launched The False Calculations Presidium project. The exhibition was held in a non-standard place for Moscow - in the Museum of entrepreneurs, philanthropists and benefactors.[13]
In 2015, together with the artist Varvara Gevorgizova, she created the "Night Movement", which is a series of events in the genre of relational aesthetics. Being a voluntary organizational network moderated by its founders, the "Night Movement" is a specially organized process, orchestrated according to one scenario or another.[14]
In 2021 author of the geometric "Route H³" of the V-A-C fund for the "Museum Four" project.[15]