| Art

Moonlight Flitting Dreams: Veronica Smirnoff

A preview of Blue Sky Red by Veronica Smirnoff at Candida Stevens Gallery, 2024.

Veronica Smirnoff, A Thousand Blue Moons, 2024

Pulling from sacred sources the artist Veronica Smirnoff creates scenes that use recognisable figures amongst abstract textures in a way that suggest shifting dream landscapes. Is it still contemporary art or does it signal something outside of the trajectory of mainstream art history? With her references to ancient techniques and Russian monks Smirnoff’s approach might be described as neo-culturalism. An approach that mixes traditional and folkloric subjects that still resonate with our digital augmented daily lives.

Veronica Smirnoff, Moonlight Flit, 2024
Veronica Smirnoff, Moonlight Flit, 2024

Exhibition Notes: Blue Sky Red – Veronica Smirnoff

Candida Stevens Gallery is delighted to present Blue Sky Red at Cromwell Place, the largest solo exhibition of Veronica Smirnoff’s work to date in the UK.

Blue Sky Red presents the latest series by British-based Russian-Born artist’s practice, featuring vibrant new paintings and drawings bursting with colour and confidence, such as Thinking Red (2024) portraying a female figure in a voluminous crimson dress. Doing away with the constraints of ‘high’ and ‘low’ subjects, Smirnoff blends the sacred and the profane, the sublime and earthly, pulling the viewer into a realm of magic and mystery, illusory and irresistible – guided by Smirnoff’s boundless imagination and ultimately by the paint itself.

The exhibition also includes three new, never-seen-before large-scale tapestries commissioned by the artist over the last year, translating her mesmerising visual language into the tactility of textiles. Each embroidery references a small panel painting by Smirnoff, digitally printed onto the fabric first, then embroidered by hand to explore sculptural and textural possibilities, while still employing an ancient artistic technique with its own long history rooted in collective storytelling.

Veronica Smirnoff, Play up, play up and play the game, 2012
Veronica Smirnoff, Play up, play up and play the game, 2012

Over two decades, Smirnoff has become a master of egg tempera painting – a technique associated with Byzantine and pre-Renaissance art. She began to train in the ancient art making method – widely practiced until the 15th century when it was replaced with oil paint – while Smirnoff was a student at the Slade School of Art. But it was the Russian monks at the Optina Pustyn Eastern Orthodox Monastic centre, on the outskirts of Moscow, that helped Smirnoff finesse her skills in her chosen medium, studying how to grind precious stones to make her own pigment powder, a traditional process that is completed by adding white wine and egg yolk. The quick-drying egg tempera is then applied laboriously, in thin layers, to gessoed wood panels; Smirnoff still sources the panels used for her paintings from the monastery, where they are made and blessed by the monks – adding a spiritual layer before the paint.

Veronica Smirnoff, Quondam, 2023
Veronica Smirnoff, Quondam, 2023

Smirnoff’s fascinating engagement with egg tempera and her careful choice of materials is the starting point for understanding her lucid, jewel-like paintings. Intimate in scale and rich in details and symbolism, Smirnoff draws on her own life experiences and memories, as well as a voracious range of cultural and political references, and taking inspiration from throughout art history, from Persian miniature painting to Japanese screens and Chinese scroll painting, to religious iconography and folklore.

Veronica Smirnoff, Blue Sky Red at Candida Stevens Gallery, 4 Cromwell Place, South Kensington, London SW7 2JE. 20 – 26 May 2024. Wednesday – Saturday: 10am – 6pm, Sunday: 10am – 4pm

Veronica Smirnoff, A Thousand Blue Moons, 2024
Veronica Smirnoff, A Thousand Blue Moons, 2024
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