Toggle menu
147
7
25
82.3K
CartoonWiki
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.
Revision as of 01:11, 8 November 2024 by wiki>Monkbot (Task 20: replace {lang-??} templates with {langx|??} ‹See Tfd› (Replaced 1);)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Short description

Anna Frants (Template:Langx; born 1 October 1965) is a Russian-American multimedia artist, curator, and art collector. She is the founder of nonprofit cultural foundation "Cyland Foundation Inc."[1] and "CYLAND" MediaArtLab,[2] and is director of "Frants Gallery" (New York, United States).[3]

Biography

Frants was born on 1 October 1965[4][5] in Leningrad, Soviet Union. In 1989, Frants graduated from the St. Petersburg Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design (formerly the Vera Mukhina Leningrad Higher School of Art and Industry), where she had majored in Industrial Design. In 1992, she was admitted to the New-York Pratt Institute to the department of Art and Design where she majored in Computer Graphics and Animation.[6]

The mastering of computer graphics and animation marked the beginning of her enthusiasm for new media, new media art and technologies in art[7] and the concentration of her interests on the transition from traditional classical methods to cyberarts that was afforded unlimited possibilities by the rapidly developing internet.

In 1997, she married Leonid Frants. Their son Daniil became the youngest artist at CYLAND MediaArtLab: when he was only twelve, he created, as part of Cyfest, an international educational game program for children, the workshop "Humanizing Robots",[8] which he held in Russia, Germany, Japan, the United States and Ukraine.

In addition to continuous exhibition activities as an artist and a curator[9] in the United States, Saint Petersburg, Europe and Japan, in 2010, Anna traveled to the Polar Region as a member of the international group of artists within the program "The Arctic Circle"[10] organized by the Canadian government. The program's purpose was to afford the artists an opportunity to visit hard-to-reach places of the Polar Region that are mostly known through scientific reports, which would subsequently allow them to create art projects based on their impressions of the region. In addition to the video footage filmed by Anna, that trip resulted in her interactive project Trembling Creatures,[11] exhibited at the group show of participants of those annual expeditions that opened in May 2014 at the "1285 Avenue of the Americas Art Gallery"[12] in New York.

Selected exhibitions

  • Cyfest 15: Deering Estate, Miami, USA 2023[13]
  • Nomada Digital Arts. Flying over birders. Jerusalem, Israel 2023[14]
  • XXII International Image Festival, XENOlandscapes, Bogotá CO 2023[15]
  • Armenia Engineering Week 2023, Engineering City, Yerevan, Armenia, 2023.[16]
  • Digitec 2023, Meridian Expo Center, Yerevan, Armenia, 2023.[17]
  • CYFEST-14: Ferment, ASU MIX Center in Arizona, USA 2022[18]
  • Art & Environment=CROSSING Exhibition, Miro Center in Gwangju KR 2022
  • Creative Machine 3 Exhibition, Goldsmiths College, London UK 2022
  • Cyfest-14 FERMENT Arts + Ecology Festival, Dartington Trust, Dartington UK 2021[19]
  • ID. ART:TECH Exhibition at the National Arts Club, New York, US 2020[20]
  • Weather Forecast: Digital Cloudiness - Reggia di Caserta, Italy, 2018.[21]
  • Personal Spaces – Interactive Multimedia Works by Anna Frants, Carla Gannis, Alexandra Dementieva, Elena Gubanova and Ivan Govorkov. National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Park South, New York, 2018.[22]
  • HYBRIS, Monsters and Hybrids in Contemporary Art, University Ca' Foscari, Venice, 2017.[23]
  • PERSONAL STRUCTURES - Open Borders. Venice, Italy, 2017[24]
  • Patterns of the Mind, Convergence, London, 2016.[25]
  • Nargifsus, Transfer Gallery, New York, 2016.[26]
  • Made in Ancient Greece, Sergey Kuryokhin Center for Contemporary Art, St. Petersburg, 2016.[27]
  • The Other Home, Made in NY Media Center by IFP, New York, 2015.[28]
  • Urbi et Orbi, as part of the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, RGGU, Moscow, 2015.[29]
  • Personal Space #1, Youth Center at the State Hermitage, St. Petersburg, 2015.
  • Re: Collection, Museum of Arts and Design, New York, 2014.[30]
  • Magnetic North, The UBS Art Gallery, New York, 2014.[31]
  • Finding Freedom in Russian Art, 1961–2014, Paul & Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum, Lafayette, USA, 2014.[32]
  • This Leads to Fire, Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, New York, 2014.[33]
  • Capital of Nowhere, 2013.[34]
  • VISIONARY DREAMS # 3261-64", 2013.[35]
  • The Time Keeper, State Hermitage, 2013.[36]
  • Migrants, 5th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, 2013.[37]
  • CYFEST Exhibition, 2012.[38]
  • The Time Keeper, Brussels, Belgium, 2012.[39]
  • Transmediale, ConcentArt e.V., Berlin, Germany, 2011.[40]
  • Trembling Creatures, SIGGRAPH ASIA, 2011, Hong Kong.[41]
  • Unforeseen, Nailya Alexander Gallery, New York City, USA[42]

Selective artworks

  • Obstinacy and persistence, Installation, 2023.[43]
  • Vagaries of affection, multimedia installation, 2023.[44]
  • Unidentified objects, multimedia installation, 2021.[45]
  • BAKLUSHAS or Frittering Away Brahms, multimedia installation, 2021.[46]
  • Shedding crocodile's tears... or crying all the way to the bank, multimedia installation, 2021.[47]
  • Simple pleasures, installation, 2021.[48]
  • Amabie (Japanese averter), multimedia installation, 2020.[49]
  • Artist union. Still live, multimedia installation, 2019.[50]
  • Hooligans, media installation, 2019.[51]
  • Peck of salt, media installation, 2019.[52]
  • Point of no return, media installation, 2019.[53]
  • Dissident, media installation, 2018.[54]
  • Reflection in a space, media installation, 2018.[55]
  • Optimist, media installation, 2018.[56]
  • Narcissus, media installation, 2018.[57]
  • Washerwomen, media installation, 2018.[58]
  • Casts, media installation, 2018.[59]
  • Living tapestry, media installation, 2017.[60]
  • Blind spot, video installation, 2017.[61]
  • Possessive shoemaker, media installation, 2017.[62]
  • Stale news, media installation, 2017.[63]
  • Under the weather, media installation, 2017.[64]
  • Informer, media installation, 2017.[65]
  • No. 0, multimedia installation in public space, 2016.[66]
  • Bluest of the seas, media installation, 2016.[67]
  • Journey, media installation, 2015.[68]
  • Live cam renaissance, series of works, video Installations, 2015.[69]
  • Doll house, performance for children, 2015.[70]
  • Personal space, series of works, video Installations, 2015.[71]
  • Anxiety, installation, 2014.[72]
  • Weather forecast, multimedia installation, 2014.[73]
  • On the lookout, installation, 2014.[74]
  • Colouring soundscapes, sound installation, 2014.[75]
  • Reflection on life No.125082, installation, 2013.[76]
  • Weather Forecast – winter/summer, installation, 2013.[77]
  • Cloud that smelled blue, installation, 2012.[78]
  • Socks snapper, installation, 2012.[79]
  • Vexation of spirit, video, 2012.[80]
  • Storm in a tea glass, media installation, 2012.[81]
  • Shadows, interactive multimedia installation, 2012.[82]
  • Hoist, installation, 2012.[83]
  • Cardboard drippings, installation, 2012.[84]
  • Acrobats, installation, 2012.[85]
  • Gravitation, installation, 2011.[86]
  • Breathing in the air, installation, 2010.[87]
  • We are here, installation, 2010.[88]
  • Window sash, kinetic Installation, 2010.[89]
  • Snowball fight, video installation, 2010.[90]
  • Toddler, video installation, 2010.[91]
  • Trembling Creatures, installation, 2010.[11]
  • Polar Bear Fodder, multimedia installation, 2009.[92]
  • Infinity, installation, 2009.[93]
  • A Symphony for X Slide Projectors, multimedia installation, 2009.[94]
  • Fur die stadt (for the city), multimedia installation, 2008.[95]
  • Soda water, multimedia installation, 2008.[96]
  • Fish talk, cyber installation, 2007.[97]
  • Speedless, cyber performance, 2007.[98]
  • In the Shade of Olive Tree (in the collection of Kyosei-no-Sato Museum, Japan), video installation, 2007.[99]
  • Drumpainting, interactive artwork, 2007.[100]
  • StaticVideo series, video, 2006.[101]
  • Sarcophagus, Ghanaian Style, or The funeral of a Dreamer. Video installation, 2005.[102]
  • The story of heroic pilot, video, 2004.[103]
  • Made in Ancient Greece, series of works (5 objects from this series are in the collection of the Museum of Arts and Design in New York), 2003 - 2015.[104]
  • Touchmeweb, netart project, 2002.[105]
  • Bride. Audio, video, sensor performance, 2002.[106]
  • The angel, computer animation, 1995.[107]

Trembling Creatures and Polar Bear Feeder were made as a result of the trip to the Polar circle as a member of the Canadian art expedition "The Arctic Circle" in 2009.[108] Artworks by Anna Frants are presented by Borey Gallery[109] (Saint Petersburg, Russia), Dam Stuhltrager Gallery[110] (New York, United States, and Berlin, Germany) and Barbarian Gallery (Zürich, Switzerland). Her works are in the collections of the New York Museum of Arts and Design, State Russian Museum, Kyosei-no-Sato Museum (Japan), Kolodzei Art Foundation,[111] Sergey Kuryokhin Center for Contemporary Art and in numerous private collections all over the world.

Curatorial activities

The most notable of Frants' curatorial works were the retrospective exhibitions "Sterligov's Group", 2006, New York, and "Art around the Barracks", 2003, New York.

In the documentary of Andrey Zagdansky "Konstantin and Mouse", dedicated to Konstantin Kuzminsky, one of the episodes was filmed at the opening night of "Art around the Barracks" at Frants Gallery in Soho.

Among contemporary artists, who constantly collaborate with Anna Frants as a curator, are Vitaly Pushnitsky, Elena Gubanova and Ivan Govorkov, Alexander Kozhin, Alexander Terebenin, Marina Koldobskaya, Alexandra Dementieva, Peter Belyi, Petr Shvetsov.[9]

CYLAND MediaArtLab

In 2006, Anna Frants together with Marina Koldobskaya founded the international media lab "СYLAND".

Since 2007, the MediaArtLab holds the annual festival of cyberart "Cyfest", the largest cyberart festival in Eastern Europe featuring artists from different countries who share an enthusiasm for new technologies.[112][9]

Template:Cquote

Nonprofit foundation "CYLAND Foundation"

In 1999, Anna and Leonid Frants created the nonprofit foundation "CYLAND Foundation"[1] that is still active. Its purpose was the representation in New York[7] of the artists from Leningrad/St. Petersburg who have been working there from the postwar 1950s until the present time.[112] The primary focus was on the so-called Leningrad underground[113] — the unique and underexplored cultural phenomenon of the 1970s and the artistic and social environment that brought if forth.

Gradually, the scope of activities of "Frants Gallery Space" expanded and started including not just the traditional genres, such as painting, sculpture and graphics, but also the art associated with the latest technologies:[1] cyberart, video art, computer animation, interactive installations as well as performance art.

Collection

The collection's creation was a natural extension of the development of "CYLAND Foundation". Since 1998, Anna and Leonid Frants have been collecting works of visual arts of Leningrad underground.[112] Their current collection also includes sculptures, assemblages, photographs, videos, objects of actual art and archival materials.

In January 2013, the Department of Contemporary Art at the Hermitage Museum organized, as a part of the project "Actual Art of St. Petersburg, A Retrospective",[114] the exhibition "Simple Rules".[115] It showcased works from Russian and foreign private collections.

References

Template:Reflist

Sources

External links

Template:Authority control

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Template:Cite web
  2. Template:Cite web
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. About Anna Frants Template:Webarchive // Facebook.
  5. Франц Анна Александровна Template:Webarchive // Famous Birthdays.ru.
  6. Лекция Анны Франц «Дизайн против Искусства против Дизайна» Template:Webarchive // National Centre for Contemporary Arts.
  7. 7.0 7.1 The Time Keeper. Una mostra di gruppo itinerante Feed dei commenti Template:Webarchive // DIGICULT. Digital Art, Design and Culture. 2012.06.12.
  8. Template:Cite web
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 People: Interview with curator Anna Frants at Venice Biennial 2015 Template:Webarchive // Chased. Magazin für Kunst, Ausstellungen, Vernissagen in Berlin. July 12. 2015.
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. 11.0 11.1 Template:Cite web
  12. Paul Segers and Arjen de Leeuw in 'Magnetic North Artists and The Arctic Circle' Template:Webarchive // Dutch Culture USA. 16 May 2014, by Stefanie Hofman.
  13. Template:Cite web
  14. Template:Cite web
  15. Template:Cite web
  16. Template:Cite web
  17. Template:Cite web
  18. Template:Cite web
  19. Template:Cite web
  20. Template:Cite web
  21. Template:Cite web
  22. Template:Cite web
  23. Template:Cite web
  24. Template:Cite web
  25. Template:Cite web
  26. Template:Cite web
  27. Template:Cite web
  28. Template:Cite web
  29. Template:Cite web
  30. Template:Cite web
  31. Template:Cite web
  32. Template:Cite web
  33. Template:Cite web
  34. Template:Cite web
  35. Template:Cite web
  36. Template:Cite web
  37. Template:Cite web
  38. Template:Cite web
  39. Template:Cite web
  40. Template:Cite web
  41. Template:Cite web
  42. Template:Cite web
  43. Template:Cite web
  44. Template:Cite web
  45. Template:Cite web
  46. Template:Cite web
  47. Template:Cite web
  48. Template:Cite web
  49. Template:Cite web
  50. Template:Cite web
  51. Template:Cite web
  52. Template:Cite web
  53. Template:Cite web
  54. Template:Cite web
  55. Template:Cite web
  56. Template:Cite web
  57. Template:Cite web
  58. Template:Cite web
  59. Template:Cite web
  60. Template:Cite web
  61. Template:Cite web
  62. Template:Cite web
  63. Template:Cite web
  64. Template:Cite web
  65. Template:Cite web
  66. Template:Cite web
  67. Template:Cite web
  68. Template:Cite web
  69. Template:Cite web
  70. Template:Cite web
  71. Template:Cite web
  72. Template:Cite web
  73. Template:Cite web
  74. Template:Cite web
  75. Template:Cite web
  76. Template:Cite web
  77. Template:Cite web
  78. Template:Cite web
  79. Template:Cite web
  80. Template:Cite web
  81. Template:Cite web
  82. Template:Cite web
  83. Template:Cite web
  84. Template:Cite web
  85. Template:Cite web
  86. Template:Cite web
  87. Template:Cite web
  88. Template:Cite web
  89. Template:Cite web
  90. Template:Cite web
  91. Template:Cite web
  92. Template:Cite web
  93. Template:Cite web
  94. Template:Cite web
  95. Template:Cite web
  96. Template:Cite web
  97. Template:Cite web
  98. Template:Cite web
  99. Template:Cite web
  100. Template:Cite web
  101. Template:Cite web
  102. Template:Cite web
  103. Template:Cite web
  104. Template:Cite web
  105. Template:Cite web
  106. Template:Cite web
  107. Template:Cite web
  108. Works Template:Webarchive // Anna Frants Personal Site.
  109. Template:Cite web
  110. Template:Cite web
  111. Template:Cite web
  112. 112.0 112.1 112.2 Anna Frants Template:Webarchive // Venice Conference 2017.
  113. Л. Гуревич. Художники ленинградского андеграунда. Биографический словарь. Искусство. СПб, 2007.
  114. Template:Cite web
  115. "Simple Rules" exhibition in Hermitage Template:Webarchive // Obtaz Atrs.