Dates: 11/04/2024 - 14/04/2024
Address: 71/5 Pyatnitskaya St., Moscow
The second edition of the Catalog Art Fair, presented by the Association of Galleries (AGA), is taking place this spring at the historic Sytin Printing House on Pyatnitskaya Street. The event brings together 52 galleries from across Russia. Among them, Gallery K35 is showcasing works by Viktor Sergey, Natalia Spechinskaya, and Evgenia Voinar - three artists united by their exploration of phantasmagorical narratives that emerge from the subconscious, populated by mythical beings and archetypes that quietly intervene in our world.
Evgenia Voinar’s work revolves around inheritance, eternity, and the tension between escaping reality and returning to it. Deeply personal, her pieces are built from a symbolic vocabulary that forms a self-contained universe—visual meditations on resisting oblivion, woven from childhood memories, dreams, and the fantasies she uses to populate her surroundings.
Natalia Spechinskaya’s series focuses on false memory. A recurring teddy bear and its companions travel between the various media in which the artist works. Through unique techniques and vibrant color, Spechinskaya places her bears firmly within contemporary art discourse while preserving their ability to evoke intimate, personal recollections in each viewer.
Belarusian artist Viktor Sergey continues to develop his series of unusual figures in uncanny situations. His visual language—marked by strange, almost photographic scenes of figures in nocturnal forests, unsettling cinematic references, and blurred portraits—has become distinctly his own, guiding us through narratives that feel both familiar and eerily displaced.
Evgenia Voinar’s work revolves around inheritance, eternity, and the tension between escaping reality and returning to it. Deeply personal, her pieces are built from a symbolic vocabulary that forms a self-contained universe—visual meditations on resisting oblivion, woven from childhood memories, dreams, and the fantasies she uses to populate her surroundings.
Natalia Spechinskaya’s series focuses on false memory. A recurring teddy bear and its companions travel between the various media in which the artist works. Through unique techniques and vibrant color, Spechinskaya places her bears firmly within contemporary art discourse while preserving their ability to evoke intimate, personal recollections in each viewer.
Belarusian artist Viktor Sergey continues to develop his series of unusual figures in uncanny situations. His visual language—marked by strange, almost photographic scenes of figures in nocturnal forests, unsettling cinematic references, and blurred portraits—has become distinctly his own, guiding us through narratives that feel both familiar and eerily displaced.