Now is Just Right Now
Completion date: August, 2012
Location: St-Petersburg, Russia,"Taiga" space.
Technique: silkscreen, neon lettering.
Location: St-Petersburg, Russia,"Taiga" space.
Technique: silkscreen, neon lettering.
Printed collateral, such as silkscreened poster & invitation, i designed for my personal first big solo-exhibition. The main theme as well as the name of the exhibition was based on a phrase "Now Is Just Right Now". Exhibition took place at St. Peterburg's loft & culture hub "Taiga"
"Now is Just Right Now is Just Right Now is..." The tape with a looped back text ‘Now is Just Right Now is…’ is a comment to the comprehending of oneself's existence in the very moment of now and the nature of any existence being inseparable with the presence. The tape was applied to the walls, ceiling and floor all over the exhibition space during the solo show. Certain amount of tape rolls was available free of charge to visitors as a takeaway piece.
«How long is now?» — the unanswered question posed in graffiti on the wall of the legendary Berlin squat Tacheles, which became a symbol of the independent Berlin of the ’90s. While comprehending the question and it’s premises, one involuntarily might find himself wondering — how do you find an answer to this question and go further towards understanding the idea of an ongoing existence? The main line of the Egor’s exhibition, where the neon installation was installed, was answering this with an artistic suggestion, to stop focusing on the concept of the ‘now-moment’ and approve of its permanent presence.
An idea of hope and a sense of the romantic — encapsulated in the authorisation of ‘now is right now’, – a confident voice of a generation that can be witnessed in Taiga, the liveliest self-initiated, non-institutional open cultural project space in St. Petersburg. After the exhibition ended, the site-specific neon installation ‘Now is just right now’, like a lighthouse that beckons in new horizons, has remained in the courtyard of Taiga’s space contributing to the formation of a new self-identity of St. Petersburg’s art scene within a more global context.