ANNA FRANTS’ RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION FROM THE FESTIVAL “BURNING MAN”

Genre: Installations and Performance
Participant: Anna Frants

A video screening prepared by Anna Frants (USA) based on materials from the contemporary art festival Burning Man. Starts at 6:00 PM.

From the festival press release:

“Trying to explain what Burning Man is to someone who has never participated in the event is like trying to describe a color to a blind person.”

The festival’s history dates back to 1986, when it was founded by Larry Harvey and Jerry James. In 1990, the park police, concerned about the risk of fire, opposed the annual fire ceremonies. This prohibition led to the creation of an international festival that now annually draws about 25,000 people to the Black Rock Desert in Nevada.

Since 1987, every year Burning Man transforms the desert into a stage for showcasing a new format of art. It rejects the dead-end concepts of minimalism that have stripped art down to its barest elements and the fashionable gallery politics of major metropolitan cities. This art form not only attempts to discover and reinterpret its genetic ties with past styles and ideas, but also bursts into entirely new, unexplored realms. It refutes the notion that art is either a market commodity or a divine creation. It frees itself from imposed social constructs and rules, allowing artists and viewers simply to think about art — and live it…

Art no longer imitates life. It is Life itself, born in the labyrinths of consciousness and becoming the eternal essence of beauty.

Weekend.RU November 22, 2004

DECEMBER 19–30, 2006. ANNA FRANTS. “VISIONARY DREAMS #2391–95”

“VISIONARY DREAMS #2391–95”
Video installation / Cyber installation In the gallery halls

Anna Frants is a multimedia artist living in New York.
She was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia. In 1989, she graduated from the Leningrad Higher School of Art and Industry named after V.I. Mukhina (now the St. Petersburg Academy of Design), receiving a classical education. Later, mastering new fields (computer graphics and animation), she expanded the scope of her creative interests.

Frants’ works have been recognized with awards from prestigious competitions. She received a prize for her 3D computer animation Angel at the Autodesk Planet Studio Award. Her short computer-animated film Angel was also part of the competition program of the SouthSide Film Festival (Pennsylvania, 2006) and the New York “Red Shift” Festival in 2004. Her works can be found in the Museum of Contemporary Art Kyoseinosato (Japan) and in private collections.

Anna Frants has participated in—and, in some cases, curated—numerous art exhibitions: the joint exhibition “Touch Me” (2003, Anna Akhmatova Museum, Saint Petersburg), which brought together American and St. Petersburg artists; the “Vivat, Saint Petersburg!” festival celebrating the city’s 300th anniversary (2003, Baltimore Museum of Contemporary Art, USA); the final exhibition of the international project “Ghanaian-Style Sarcophagus or The Funeral of a Dreamer” (2005, Berliner Kunstprojekt, Berlin); and the Chinese International Art Exhibition (2006, Beijing).

Solo exhibitions include:
“Sarcophagus Ghanaian-Style or The Funeral of a Dreamer” at the Kvadrat Gallery (2004, St. Petersburg);
“Window” (2005, Kyoseinosato, Japan).

For several years, she has taught media disciplines and animation. Anna Frants is a regular contributor to NY Arts Magazine, which focuses on issues in contemporary art.

“In her work, Anna Frants speaks in a cheerful, light tone about serious, profound matters, avoiding academic clichés and pretentious epithets. Using the principle of interactivity, she involves participants of all ages in her projects. /…/ The artist shows that new technologies are not just for entertainment, but are a powerful means of reflecting the human inner world — with all its complexity and nuance. In this way, computer art is close to traditional painting.”
— from an article by Olga Khoroshilova

At “Borey” Gallery, Anna Frants will present installations: Window, Made in Ancient Greece, as well as a series of works from the Static Video cycle and Video Graffiti.

A booklet is being prepared by the Borey Gallery for Anna Frants’ exhibition, featuring articles written by the artist on cyber and video art, published in NY Arts Magazine.


Olga Khoroshilova. “Anna Frants”

Picasso once said: “At the age of four I could draw like Raphael, but it took me a lifetime to learn to draw like a child.”
This aphorism captures the essence of modern art — an art of revolutionaries, iconoclasts, and empirical researchers. Children are natural atheists, understanding the world purely through experience and rejecting established canons. Life is a blank slate, and every step promises discovery. This childlike attitude toward art was embodied by the early 20th-century avant-garde — Fauves, Cubists, Dadaists — and continued by contemporary media artists. Among them is Anna Frants, a digital artist and curator — a mature and accomplished individual, but in essence, a child.

Her creative journey follows the logic of Picasso’s statement. She really did “draw like an adult” for five years: from 1984 to 1989, she studied industrial design at the Mukhina School. She studied anatomy, produced academic studies, and mastered the fundamentals of design — acquiring traditional academic skills. After graduating and moving to the U.S., she realized industrial design was a meaningless pursuit and started anew, like a child, from a blank page. Not surprisingly, she chose computer animation as her new field and studied at Pratt Institute for two years. Then she immersed herself in contemporary art, integrating animation, video, and film, and continues “learning to draw like a child” — making discoveries, exploring unorthodox paths, and bringing fresh, nontrivial ideas to life.

In her work, Anna Frants speaks in a cheerful, light tone about serious, deep topics, avoiding academic formulas and lofty language. Using interactivity, she draws in people of all ages. One of her best-known projects is Touch Me (2002), a virtual studio for interactive collaboration between artists. Each participant modifies a base image using two main elements — video and sound — which are associated with certain colors. The result is a continuously transforming image with a musical background. Among the long-term project’s contributors are Alina Bliumis, Elena Gubanova, Asya Nemchenok, and Vladimir Gruzdev.

Sarcophagus, Ghanaian Style, or The Funeral of a Dreamer (2005) is another of Frants’ “childlike” projects. A white foam ball with fluttering wings hangs over lit candles. Video footage — scenes of life in a Ghanaian village, family film clips, and a spinning eye — is projected onto the ball. Frants wanted, “borrowing the idea from Ghanaian villagers,” to imagine her own funeral — joyfully and playfully. Other artists, including Andrei Bartenev, Maria Baturina, and Alexei Trubetskoy, followed with their own fantasy sarcophagus and funeral concepts.

Frants even avoids clichés in such a traditional genre as portraiture. In her latest project, Static Video (2006), she presented a series of electronic portraits — for example, of the well-known Leningrad nonconformist poet Konstantin Kuzminsky — “painted” using video, computer graphics, and animation. The artist demonstrates that new technologies are not just for entertainment, but are among the best tools for expressing the human inner world — in all its richness and nuance. In this, computer art is close to classical painting.

No matter how cutting-edge or revolutionary Anna Frants’ work may be, it remains deeply connected to the centuries-old heritage of the “three noble arts.” Media art is a bold and mischievous dreamer-child, perched on the shoulders of the academic giant.

Borey Art Centre December 19, 2006

ANNA FRANTS’ EXHIBITION

While still in school, Anna Frants decided to become an animator. However, in the early 1980s in Leningrad, there was no place to study animation, and traveling to Moscow was required, but she did not go. Instead, she enrolled in the design department at the Mukhina College, where she graduated successfully. However, she never worked in industrial design. She moved to New York to live with her father, where she finally began studying animation. More precisely, she delved into computer animation right as new technologies were emerging, gradually discovering that the technologies themselves fascinated her more than their application. This is how Anna Frants turned to contemporary high-tech art, a field she has been engaged in for the past decade, regularly exhibiting in St. Petersburg. From now on, she promises to appear even more frequently, as this year her joint project with the State Center for Contemporary Art (GCSI), the media laboratory Cyland in Kronstadt, is gaining momentum.


Technology either creates an alternative reality, as demonstrated at the recent Cyberfest at the Peter and Paul Fortress, where Anna Frants invited visitors to wear special glasses that altered the speed of the image depending on the viewer’s movements. In the Borey hall, these glasses allowed visitors to create a living, swaying shadow of an olive tree.
Or, technology convinces you that the alternative reality is you. This is what Anna Frants plans to show in Borey. In one of her new installations, two real fish from Kuznechny Market will have conversations in a setting surrounded by fruits, shells, glasses, and other elements of classic still life, both grand and simple. The setup is rather simple: the dialogue text will be projected onto a screen in the form of speech bubbles, creating a kind of three-dimensional comic strip. However, importantly, the artist does not know in advance what the fish will discuss. The text will be randomly pulled from blogs by a program specifically created by Anna Frants for this purpose. The viewer is free to read or ignore the text, but should understand this: while they watch the fish converse, life elsewhere is happening in much more exciting ways.

Afisha Moskva December 10, 2007