‘Not me, not mine’: new ceramics on show

‘Not me, not mine’: new ceramics on show

Telegraph Hill Festival Open Studios, SE14 5SD 24 March 1-6pm

This show is drawn from a range of explorative pieces made as an attempt in deepening of the mundane existence by making. Soothing the reality of life that is inevitably stained with suffering by pursuing visual and poetic meaning making and being consistently responsive to the whims of practice and thus allowing these often dream-like pieces to emerge.

Touching upon the themes of female embodiment, childhood worries, spirituality, resistance to tyranny, search for mother and the feminine source the work is developed though the interaction of digital image and the presence of fired and glazed clay body, evoking permanence. Combined through time-based and demanding making process of many stages this work is a study of how the surface can present depth and how figuration contorts into formlessness.

The printed element of the work includes quotes from family photo archive, Pergamum Frieze, images of Rodin’s sculptures, poetry, internet, and my own collage work. The video work in the garden is a piece from 2007, called Egg and Bacon.

Rhythm of making, language, and physicality of life in day-to-day existence are consistently important for how this work is developed. Making is a process and a site of becoming that constantly negotiates the balance between gaining or losing control over media, whether it is ink, clay, or paint.

The work in this show is not for sale, but if you are interested in following my practice, please join my mailing list and I will be in touch when it becomes available.

Southwark Park Galleries, Annual Open Exhibition 2023

Southwark Park Galleries, Annual Open Exhibition 2023

Pleased to share that 2 of my pieces will be on show in Southwark Park Gallery. Remeber when…, 2023 and Za wolność, 2023 are some of the latest piees from this year that I am happy about. The show is happening both online and in Lake gallery in Southwark Park. Hope you have a chance to visit.

11 November–9 December 2023  //   Lake Gallery Preview:  Saturday 11 November // 1pm–4pm Exhibition Open:  Wednesday – Sunday // 11am–4pm

TKO – Nunhead Art Trail, September 2017

TKO – Nunhead Art Trail, September 2017

TKO is a set of new ceramic pieces that came about as a mediation on circuit training and boxing practice. It is a study of material and technical aspects of clay and ceramics. Boxing and gym exercise is a a self-forming process that happens though persistence and repetition, clay is a forming process that changes the maker and creates a new shape. We talk about clay bodies in ceramics to refer to the material that forms our pieces. The ‘creation of man from clay’ is a theme recurring though ancient myths and mythologies, and I keep coming back to it as basis for my thinking about clay, since I’ve started exploring it’s possibilities, and alongside my boxing practice. Materiality of oneself and clay as material have deep connections.

The exhibition was organised for Nunhead Art Trail, community art and craft event held annually in Nunhead and New Cross, London, UK.

www.nunheadarttrail.co.uk

Mail art

Mail art

Storming the Winter Palace, 2013 was made and presented in Showroom, London as a result of print on demand workshop. 30 copies were distributed internationally though by mail. The book is complied of a series of A4 Photocopies, 10 pages in total, all chosen from a book with full text and some slides of Guy Debord’s films.

Space Flower, 2016, a book of cut-out poetry made from diverse sources, distributed trough maliling list of South London-based artists and friends, A4  photocopy, edition of 20.

Exploring a vessel form in terracotta

Exploring a vessel form in terracotta

towers - tatiana baskakova 2016

After 2 initial years of exploring ceramics, and establishing a working process for our studio I finally had time to focus on my own work in 2016, and started explore making and vessel-form. These are the images of some results.

I focused on terracotta and slip. Some of this work and its specific colour palette was prompted by conversations and mail art exchange with Robert Carter, Olso-based artist and friend. Some of these pieces first came to be completed in 2017, when I switched to working with stoneware.

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SE14 Punchlines – 11 June, Ladette Space

SE14 Punchlines - Tatiana Baskakova

My new performance work ‘SE14 Punchlines’ will be on show at Nomad Art School event in Ladette Space, which is a part of AntiUniversity Now event.

Rather exciting, so come and see it alongside a fresh line-up of mostly locally based artists doing some educational stuff… I am on Sunday 6pm. Programme starts at 2:30pm. 55 Cossal Walk SE15, right by Queens Rd. Pkhm.

More info at NoMad’s website

Cooperative banners

 

utopia is not in the past

Summer 2015

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December 2014

tatiana baskakova - coop banner

June 2014


 

Series of banners made for Ceramics Studio Co-op, a workshop and artists studio in New Cross, South London that operates as an artist-run worker co-operative. Ceramics Studio Co-op was co-founded by Tatiana Baskakova and her sister Anna Baskakova in 2014.

These series function as an ongoing tool for refection and documentation of the co-operative and how it is going though different stages if it’s life. Banners are made to be displayed in the classes room and work as conversation tools for users and visors of the co-op.

 

Artists’ and Cultural Workers’ Dinner: Cultural Work and Urban Displacement

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During the ArtLicks weekend, alongside Nomad School and Houserules’ new project The Guided Tour Daniella Valz Gen and myself hosted Artists’ and Cultural Workers’ Dinner at the Field, a community space and a social centre at New Cross that I have been involved in since summer 2014.

We have cooked together dahl and a crumble. Admission fee included bringing drinks and fruit for pudding. Above is a photograph by artist Donna Riddington inscribed “Artists’ hands preparing communal grub at The Field while discussing displaced communities across Peckham.

The programme of the dinner started from a walk beginning at Holly Bush Shrubbery at Peckham that was led by Daniella. 17 artists and cultural workers attended a conversation that started shortly after a walk, cooking and having a dinner together. Different opinions were raised and heavy disagreements emerged. Further I would list questions and statements that I have noted down during the conversation.

Statements:
Developers are not interested in artists, but creative professionals and their disposable incomes who come alongside.
Cutting though social classes artists have access to different people and spaces or know how to get it.
It is planned that by 2033 there would be no council estates in London.
Problem is the undemocratic planning policy that is not controlled by people who live in the city.
Regeneration is about moving social problems to other places.
Community is about sharing space.
People who make change are desperate.
All areas of London have community hubs, this is how local communities can be joined.

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Questions:
Why are we [artists] attractive to developers?
Is this about blame or rather accepting our position as artists?
Maybe gentrification is not a bad thing really?
Do we have a choice?
Do we have time for political interventions?
Are there better ways to create?
What are different communities around us? How to engage with local community?
What can artists offer to local community that faces displacement?
Would artist become a social worker?
Is artist the one who points at things?
Should artist jump a fence and become a community activist?
Is being ethical a hard work?
Is that a question of having to go and find community? Building relations with the community?
Are art practice and social work polar opposites?
Is there a  drive to abandon aesthetic practice and take art practice into different direction?
Can our practice include all several aspects, being socially responsive and self-reflexive at the same moment?

I am so very grateful for the contribution of ideas, time and presence of artists who came to share food and space and be open and honest about their positions and knowledge about processes we are living though. The Field became instrumental in opening this conversation that brings together artistic work and political. Hosting a dinner there reassured me again that working alongside community activists and caring for the space is somehow unarguably important for my understanding of my own practice, and to some extent of roles that artists could have in the community.

There were multiple calls to continue conversation that had started that evening, we’ll have to see what we can do.

Holding Cell, De Beauvoir Residency, 2015

Holding Cell, De Beauvoir Residency, 2015

Tatiana Baskakova, holding cell 2015

Holding Cell was created during De Beauvoir Residency project by Houserules in February 2015.

The online camera was installed in a shed in a Dalston flat where artists made work for a week negotiating working hours with the hosts.

Reacting on the corner camera this project reenacts in child-scale experience of being held in a police station cell after Tower Hamelts arrest of 287 in 2013.

Materials: cardbord boxes, white emulsion, found objects, lights.

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Walk though the sites of revolutionary thinking

With kind support from Pushkin House.
Programme curated by Elena Zaytseva.
November 2013

“Tatiana Baskakova invites you to join her on a walk though the sites formerly inhabited by Russian revolutionaries. Figures like Kropotkin, Kollontai, Lenin, Trotsky, Herzen and others chose London as their place to organize and publish more than a century ago. Based in the areas across Clerkenwell, Pentonville and Whitechapel this walk offers a way to collectively explore London through the locations connected to those histories..

For years British media is portraying Russians as commonly millionaires or spies, and one can actually witness cultural dominance of the West London in the presentation of Russian culture, and in forming expatiate identities. The origin of this work is connected to the interest in the exploration of another side of Russian heritage in London: the tradition of political study, revolutionary publishing, organizing and speech making. This work is a result of collaboration with Russian cultural centre, Pushkin House and is a second in the series of diaspora-connected works happening this November.

The walk starts at noon in Pushkin House, on 23 November 2013
There is no need to make bookings and this is a free event.”

http://www.pushkinhouse.org/single-event/events/lenin-in-london-a-walk-through-the-sites-of-revolutionary-thinking
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