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The Strange City

Ilya Kabakov

The Strange City

Ilya Kabakov
  • Date: 2014
  • Style: Conceptual Art
  • Genre: installation

The concept for an exhibit at the Grand Palais in 2014 is the creation of a utopian city resembling “The City of the Sun” that at the same time has a romantic, lofty content similar to Hermann Hesse’s Castile. There are five buildings in this city that has the shape of a full circle. The central building is located directly next to the entrance into the city and is titled “The Empty Museum.” Represented inside is the interior of a “classical” museum, but instead of paintings there area bright spots of light on its dark bordeaux-colored walls. The solemn music of J. S. Bach’s “Passacaglia” and everything together -- the semi-darkness, the gold gilding, the soft chairs – form a strange and lofty kind of union of a museum and a temple.

The other four buildings of the city, similar in layout, represent structures that partially resemble chapels with a central main space surrounded by a corridor. The subjects displayed in each building are different, but all of them are united by an atmosphere of tranquility and concentration, thanks to the vertical direction of the central hall and the light shining downward through an aperture in the ceiling. A large model of the magical city of “Manas” existing simultaneously in two planes -- the “heavenly” one up above and the “earthly” plane down below – is erected in the first building.

In the second building is the model for the structures “Center of Cosmic Energy” and “Center for Communication with the Noosphere,” which can serve, according to the idea of the Russian scientist D. Vernadsky, as a constant source of creativity, since it is precisely in the Noosphere that ideas created by humanity’s best minds are preserved.

In the third building is a visual representation of how one might meet one’s angel, in what way and under what circumstances that angel might come to our aid.

The fourth building is devoted to the display of another enigmatic project: presented within a composition of 12 paintings and an object are various versions of the image of a “Gate” standing at the very horizon that can be viewed to have the symbolic meaning of a gate both “into here” and “to the outside.”

In all the corridors surrounding the central space of the buildings are sketches, objects and models that help to reveal and complement the main concept. Two other structures can be seen beyond the city walls, along the same axis with its entrance and exit. Directly in front of the entrance into the city, not very far from it, is a “Gate” resembling in appearance and meaning a victory arch and it underscores the main axis of the entire exhibit. At the very exit from the city along the exact same axis is the largest building of the project, “The Great Chapel” (with dimensions of 11 x 22 x 7 meters), that houses a large white space with an open ceiling and a multitude of fragmentary images on all four walls. These fragments leave the impression that the reality surrounding us is disappearing in the white light, along with the peace and tranquility. The “Chapel” harkens back to the tradition of the “artist’s space” and was conceptualized as a continuation of Giotto’s chapel and Rothko’s chapel.

The ring perimeter of the entire “city” is surrounded by two walls. Inside they represent a suite with paintings hanging along both sides. For this project we have selected only those works that correspond to the overall concept: they are light, “meditative,” and insofar as possible, large.

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