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Selected works (1992-2019)

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Kiss

Kiss, 2017

Diptych

Acrylic and oil on canvas

Each: 72 7/16 x 46 1/16 in. (184 x 117 cm)

Overall: 72 7 1/6 x 92 1/8 in. (184 x 234 cm)

Collection of the artist

Vanitas 1

Vanitas 1, 2017

Acrylic and oil on canvas

78 3/4 x 59 1/16 in. (200 x 150 cm)

Collection of the artist

Vanitas 2

Vanitas 2, 2017

Acrylic and oil on canvas

78 3/4 x 59 1/16 in. (200 x 150 cm)

Collection of the artist 

Male Torso

Male Torso, 1992
From In Memoriam, 1992
Acrylics and oil on board
74 7/8 x 27 1/2 in. (190 x 70 cm)

Eye

Eye, 1992
Masonite, oil, acrylics, plastics, plaster
15 x 44 x 1 in. (38.1 x 111.8 x 2.5 cm)

Ira

New painting (Ira), 2016
Oil on canvas
72 x 46 in. (182.9 x 116.8 cm)

John

New painting (John), 2016
Oil on canvas
72 x 46 in. (182.9 x 116.8 cm)

Mobius, 1980

Mobius, 1990

Diptych

Oil on shaped canvas

Overall: 48 7/8 x 156 in. (124 x 396 cm)

Home Painting #2, 1998

Home Painting No. 2, 1998
Oil on linen
78 3/4 x 78 3/4 in. (200 x 200 cm)

Top Management

Top Management, 2013
From Without a Title, 2013
Laminated print on vinyl, board, parachute silk
75 x 118 in. (190.5 x 299.7 cm)

Skins

Skin #9, Xi Yu, 2010
From Skins, 2010
Eco-solvent inkjet print on latex
Text printed on clear adhesive vinyl
29 x 28 1/2 in. (73.7 x 72.4 cm)

Figure Skaters

Figure Skaters, 2013
From Without a Title, 2013
Print on canvas, pastel

Edition of 5
60 x 125 in. (152.4 x 317.5 cm)

Hoodie

Hoodie, 2012
From Renovation, 2012
Print on shaped canvas, acrylics, oil
17 x 11 in. (43 x 27.9 cm)

Pillow (man front)

Pillow (man front), 1996
From Daddy Needs to Relax1996
Ink on plaster
27 1/2 x 25 1/2 x 10 in. (69.8 x 64.8 x 25.4 cm)

Pillow (woman)

Pillow (woman), 1996
From Daddy Needs to Relax, 1996
Ink on plaster
23 1/2 x 21 1/2 x 8 1/2 in. (59.7 x 54.6 x 21.6 cm)

Daddy Needs to Relax

Installation shot from series Daddy Needs to Relax1996

Without a title

Series Without a Title, 2013
Three-channel video
27 minutes

Biography

Irina Nakhova (b. 1955, Moscow) graduated from the Graphic Design Department of the Moscow Institute of Polygraphy in 1978, where she studied with a generation of Russian nonconformist artists now known as the Moscow Conceptual School. She received international recognition as a young artist for Rooms (1983-1987), the first “total installation” in Russian art, located in the Moscow apartment where she still lives today.

An installation artist and academically trained painter, Nakhova combines painting, sculpture, and new media into interactive installations and environments that engage viewers as co-creators of conceptual mindscapes. "One of my largest goals is to create spaces for difference experiences, physical and intellectual, that do not exist otherwise as spaces," Nakhova said in an interview with New York Arts Magazine. "I am interested in art that gives experiences, that is powerful and eye-opening and that has significance. Significance in a way that gives insight to both individual and social life, as I still believe that art is power."

Nakhova was a member of the Union of Artists of the USSR from 1986 to 1989. Her first monograph, Irina Nakhova: Works 1973-2004, was co-published in 2004 by the Salzburg International Summer Academy, Austria, and the National Centre for Contemporary Arts, Moscow. Nakhova received the prestigious Kandinsky Prize for “Project of the Year” in 2013, one of the highest honors in contemporary Russian art. In 2015, she was chosen as the first female artist to represent Russia in its pavilion at the Venice Biennale, with an installation, The Green Pavilion, that The Guardian called "haunting...its impact is devastatingly direct."

In the catalogue for The Green Pavilion, curator Margarita Tupitsyn writes of Nakhova’s green-red room, “The abstract composition comes from Nakhova’s earlier canvas Primary Colors 2 (2003), imbued with the Russian avant-garde’s reductive color theories…and embrace of what Malevich termed ‘a new color realism.’ Applied mechanically, the latter transgresses the boundaries of the canvas to operate in literal space. In this sense, Nakhova’s green-red room is a postmodern (Jamesonian) hybrid of color-form and color-text in which one can locate the traces and distortions of society as a whole.”

Nakhova’s work has been shown in over thirty solo exhibitions and numerous major group exhibitions worldwide. Her work can be found in private collections and museum collections such as Tate Modern, London; The Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection of Soviet Nonconformist Art, New Brunswick; The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow; and the Moscow Museum of Modern Art. She has taught contemporary art at Wayne State University, Carnegie Mellon University, Princeton University, and the International Summer Academy of Fine Arts, Salzburg, among other institutions.

Irina Nakhova lives and works in the United States and Russia.

Selected Exhibitions

Selected solo exhibitions

2019 Irina Nakhova: Museum on the Edge. Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University

2015  The Green Pavilion. Representing Russia in the Russian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale

2011  Rooms. Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow

2006  Moscow Installation. Karlsruhe Kunstlerhaus, Karlsruhe, Germany

2005  Artificial Shrubbery and Woman Sitting on the Bank. State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow 

2004  Alert: Code Orange. National Centre for Contemporary Arts, Moscow

2000  Deposition. Salzburg Musuem of Modern Art, Salzburg, Austria

Selected group exhibitions

2019 Room 4 in Performer and Participant. Tate Modern, London

2019 There Is a Beginning at the End: the Secret Tintoretto Fraternity, Chiesa di San Fantin

2016  Thinking Pictures: Moscow Conceptual Art in the Dodge Collection. Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ

2016  Russian Artists: Participants of the Venice Biennale, Manege Central Exhibition Hall, Moscow

2015  Post Pop: East Meets West, Saatchi Gallery, London

2011  Special guest of the 4th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art

2009  History of Russian Video Art. Vol. 2, Moscow Museum of Modern Art

2007  Kandinsky Prize, Exhibition of Selected Nominees, Vinzavod Contemporary Art Center, Moscow; Riga, Latvia; and Palazzo Italia, Berlin

2006  Collage in Russia. State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

1993  Adresse provisoire pour I’art contemporain russe. Musée de la Poste, Paris

1988  Ich lebe - Ich sehe. Kunstmuseum, Bern, Switzerland

1984  XV Exhibition of Young Moscow Artists. Manege Central Exhibition Hall, Moscow