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{{Short description|Czech video artist}}
{{Short description|conceptual artist}}


{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
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| nationality =
| nationality = [[Austria]]
| education =
| education =
| alma_mater = [[University of Vienna]], [[Academy of Fine Arts Vienna]]
| alma_mater = [[University of Vienna]], [[Academy of Fine Arts Vienna]]
| known_for = [[media art]]
| known_for = [[conceptual art]], [[video art]], [[installation art]], [[photography]]
| notable_works =
| notable_works =
| style =
| style =
| movement =
| movement =
| spouse =
| spouse = [[Scott Clifford Evans]]
| awards = 2022 Dr.-Karl-Renner-Preis der Stadt Wien, 2021 Otto Breicha Prize, 2020 Österreichischer Kunstpreis für Bildende Kunst, 2011 Outstanding Artist Award, 2009 Preis der Stadt Vienna, 2006 T-Mobile Art Award, 2004 Förderungspreis der Stadt Vienna, 2002 Ursula Blickle Förderpreis, 2002 Pfann-Ohmann-Preis, 2000 SCA Kunstpreis, 2000 Professor-Hilde-Goldschmidt-Anerkennungspreis, 1999 Römerquelle-Preis
| awards = Artist Residency and New York Studio Grant at ISCP by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture
| elected =
| elected =
| patrons =
| patrons =
| memorials =
| memorials =
| website = [http://www.jermolaewa.com/ www.jermolaewa.com/]
| website = [http://www.jermolaewa.com www.jermolaewa.com]
| module =
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}}
}}
'''Anna Jermolaewa''' (born '''Анна Ермолаева''' (1970, [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]], [[Russia]])<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.jermolaewa.com/biography.html|title=Anna Jermolaewa|website=www.jermolaewa.com}}</ref> is a Russian and Austrian media artist. In 1999 her video piece "Chicken Triptych" was selected by [[Harald Szeemann]] to be presented at [[Venice Biennale]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.yumpu.com/xx/document/read/25715339/sabine-schaschl-anna-jermolaewa|title=Sabine Schaschl: Anna Jermolaewa|website=yumpu.com}}</ref> Her artworks are held in the collections of the [[Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam|Stedelijk Museum]],<ref>{{Cite web|last=Grrr.nl|title=Anna Jermolaewa|url=https://www.stedelijk.nl/en/collectie/maker/11128-anna-jermolaewa|access-date=2021-12-08|website=www.stedelijk.nl|language=en}}</ref> Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, [[Kiasma|Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Finnish National Gallery - Work: 3´Attempts to Survive|url=https://www.kansallisgalleria.fi/en/object/607690|access-date=2021-12-08|website=www.kansallisgalleria.fi|language=en}}</ref>
'''Anna Jermolaewa''' (born '''Анна Ермолаева''' 1970, [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]], [[Russia]])<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.jermolaewa.com/biography.html|title=Anna Jermolaewa|website=www.jermolaewa.com}}</ref> is a conceptual artist based in Vienna, Austria since 1989. Her artistic practice incorporates a wide range of media: video, installation, painting, performance, photography, and sculpture.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Анна Ермолаева {{!}} Арт-сообщество|url=https://artguide.com/people/2775-anna-iermolaieva-663|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1999, her video work ''Chicken Triptych'' was selected by [[Harald Szeemann]] to be presented in the Arsenal location of the [[48th Venice Biennale]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.yumpu.com/xx/document/read/25715339/sabine-schaschl-anna-jermolaewa|title=Sabine Schaschl: Anna Jermolaewa|website=yumpu.com}}</ref>


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Anna was born in Leningrad. She studied fine arts at the Imperial Academy of Arts. After accusing of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda Anna moved to Vienna, where after several attempts she was able to enter the [[Academy of Fine Arts Vienna|Vienna Academy of Fine Arts]]. In 1998 she graduated from the Faculty of Art History at the [[University of Vienna]] and later, in 2002, she finished her studies on the faculty of painting, graphics and new technologies at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts.
Anna Jermolaewa was born in Leningrad, USSR. In 1989, after being accused of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda because of co-founding the first opposition party and its newspaper – she fled to Vienna, Austria. After several attempts, Jermolaewa was accepted as a student at the [[Academy of Fine Arts Vienna]], where she studied in the class of Peter Kogler. In 1998, she graduated from the Faculty of Art History at the [[University of Vienna]] and in 2002 finished her studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.


After serving as Professor of Media Arts at the [[ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe]] from 2006-2011 and Guest Professor of Art in Contemporary Contexts at [[Kunsthochschule Kassel]] from 2016-2017, she has been Professor of Experimental Art at the [[University of Art and Design Linz]] since 2018.
In the following years, Anna Jermolaewa was awarded: Römerquelle-Preis (1999), Professor-Hilde-Goldschmidt-Anerkennungspreis (2000), Pfann-Ohmann-Preis (2002), Vienna City Consolation Prize (Förderungspreis der Stadt Wien, 2004), T-Mobile art award 2006, Vienna City Prize (2009).


Anna Jermolaewa has been awarded the following: Dr.-Karl-Renner-Preis der Stadt Wien (2022), Otto Breicha Prize (2021), Österreichischer Kunstpreis für Bildende Kunst (2020), Outstanding Artist Award (2011), Preis der Stadt Vienna (2009), T-Mobile Art Award (2006), Vienna City Consolation Prize (Förderungspreis der Stadt Wien, 2004), Pfann-Ohmann-Preis (2002), Professor-Hilde-Goldschmidt-Anerkennungspreis (2000), Römerquelle-Preis (1999).
The range of media that Anna works with includes painting, performances, photography, video art.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Анна Ермолаева {{!}} Арт-сообщество|url=https://artguide.com/people/2775-anna-iermolaieva-663|url-status=live}}</ref>

Jermolaewa's conceptual practice incorporates a wide range of media: video, installation, painting, performance, photography, and sculpture.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Анна Ермолаева {{!}} Арт-сообщество|url=https://artguide.com/people/2775-anna-iermolaieva-663|url-status=live}}</ref>

Her work is held in the collections of the Kunsthaus Bregenz, Stedelijk Museum, Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, MUMOK – Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna, Volpinum Kunstsammlung, MUSA, Museum auf Abruf, Vienna, Tiroler Landesmuseums Ferdinandeum, Vehbi Koc Foundation, Kontakt-The Art Collection of Erste Group, Belvedere, Landesgalerie Linz, Vienna Museum, Collection of Bank Austria, EVN Collection, and Arbeiterkammer Vienna.


== Сase No. 64 ==
== Сase No. 64 ==
During her studies in Leningrad, Anna participated in publishing activities in the small typewritten weekly [[Демократическая оппозиция|Democratic Opposition]], which had a circulation of 500 copies per issue. At the age of 17, her and two more editors, Artem Gadasik and Vladimir Yaremenko, a criminal case was opened.<ref>{{Cite web|title=|url=http://www.jermolaewa.com/pdf/tCwINCb0LXQvdC40L3QsC5wZGY.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> It is believed that this case was the most recent court case before the collapse of the USSR. Anna was accused of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda because of Yaremenko's poem published in the weekly. Investigators interrogated 300 people and conducted more than a dozen searches, seizing manuscripts, video recorders and televisions. The investigation was closely followed in the programs of a United States government-funded [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty|Radio Liberty]], and politicians and human rights activists constantly talked about the fate of Yaremenko, Gadasik and Jermolaewa. Due to the possibility of political repressions and an open criminal case, Anna decided to flee the USSR. Through acquaintances from Lviv, she and other members of the editorial board of the Democratic Opposition asked for an invitation from unknown people to Krakow. An unknown woman there helped them find one of the shopping tours to Vienna that appeared for the Poles. They managed to cross the border with a Soviet passport. The first three weeks Anna and her partners spent on a bench at the station, without food, and then ended up in a refugee camp.
During her studies in Leningrad, Anna participated in publishing activities in the small typewritten weekly [[Демократическая оппозиция|Democratic Opposition]], which had a circulation of 500 copies per issue. At the age of seventeen, a criminal case was opened against her and two more of its editors, Artem Gadasik and Vladimir Yaremenko.<ref>{{Cite web|title=|url=http://www.jermolaewa.com/pdf/tCwINCb0LXQvdC40L3QsC5wZGY.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> It is believed that this case was the last court case of this manner before the collapse of the USSR. Jermolaewa was accused of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda because of Yaremenko's poem published in the weekly. Investigators interrogated three-hundred people and conducted more than a dozen searches, seizing manuscripts, video recorders, and televisions. The investigation was closely followed by the United States government-funded [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty|Radio Liberty]] and politicians and human rights activists constantly talked about the fate of Yaremenko, Gadasik, and Jermolaewa. Due to the possibility of political repression and an open criminal case, she decided to flee the USSR. Through acquaintances from Lviv, she and other members of the editorial board of the Democratic Opposition asked for an invitation from unknown people to Krakow. An unknown woman there helped them find one of the shopping tours to Vienna that appeared for the Poles. They managed to cross the border with a Soviet passport. In their first three weeks in Austria, Jermolaewa and her partners spent their nights on benches in the [[Wien Westbahnhof railway station]], without food, before they ended up in a refugee camp in [[Traiskirchen]].


== Solo shows ==
== Solo shows ==

Revision as of 11:19, 26 December 2022

Anna Jermolaewa
Анна Ермолаева
Born1970
NationalityAustria
Alma materUniversity of Vienna, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
Known forconceptual art, video art, installation art, photography
SpouseScott Clifford Evans
Awards2022 Dr.-Karl-Renner-Preis der Stadt Wien, 2021 Otto Breicha Prize, 2020 Österreichischer Kunstpreis für Bildende Kunst, 2011 Outstanding Artist Award, 2009 Preis der Stadt Vienna, 2006 T-Mobile Art Award, 2004 Förderungspreis der Stadt Vienna, 2002 Ursula Blickle Förderpreis, 2002 Pfann-Ohmann-Preis, 2000 SCA Kunstpreis, 2000 Professor-Hilde-Goldschmidt-Anerkennungspreis, 1999 Römerquelle-Preis
Websitewww.jermolaewa.com

Anna Jermolaewa (born Анна Ермолаева 1970, Leningrad, Russia)[1] is a conceptual artist based in Vienna, Austria since 1989. Her artistic practice incorporates a wide range of media: video, installation, painting, performance, photography, and sculpture.[2] In 1999, her video work Chicken Triptych was selected by Harald Szeemann to be presented in the Arsenal location of the 48th Venice Biennale.[3]

Biography

Anna Jermolaewa was born in Leningrad, USSR. In 1989, after being accused of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda – because of co-founding the first opposition party and its newspaper – she fled to Vienna, Austria. After several attempts, Jermolaewa was accepted as a student at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, where she studied in the class of Peter Kogler. In 1998, she graduated from the Faculty of Art History at the University of Vienna and in 2002 finished her studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.

After serving as Professor of Media Arts at the Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe from 2006-2011 and Guest Professor of Art in Contemporary Contexts at Kunsthochschule Kassel from 2016-2017, she has been Professor of Experimental Art at the University of Art and Design Linz since 2018.

Anna Jermolaewa has been awarded the following: Dr.-Karl-Renner-Preis der Stadt Wien (2022), Otto Breicha Prize (2021), Österreichischer Kunstpreis für Bildende Kunst (2020), Outstanding Artist Award (2011), Preis der Stadt Vienna (2009), T-Mobile Art Award (2006), Vienna City Consolation Prize (Förderungspreis der Stadt Wien, 2004), Pfann-Ohmann-Preis (2002), Professor-Hilde-Goldschmidt-Anerkennungspreis (2000), Römerquelle-Preis (1999).

Jermolaewa's conceptual practice incorporates a wide range of media: video, installation, painting, performance, photography, and sculpture.[4]

Her work is held in the collections of the Kunsthaus Bregenz, Stedelijk Museum, Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, MUMOK – Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna, Volpinum Kunstsammlung, MUSA, Museum auf Abruf, Vienna, Tiroler Landesmuseums Ferdinandeum, Vehbi Koc Foundation, Kontakt-The Art Collection of Erste Group, Belvedere, Landesgalerie Linz, Vienna Museum, Collection of Bank Austria, EVN Collection, and Arbeiterkammer Vienna.

Сase No. 64

During her studies in Leningrad, Anna participated in publishing activities in the small typewritten weekly Democratic Opposition, which had a circulation of 500 copies per issue. At the age of seventeen, a criminal case was opened against her and two more of its editors, Artem Gadasik and Vladimir Yaremenko.[5] It is believed that this case was the last court case of this manner before the collapse of the USSR. Jermolaewa was accused of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda because of Yaremenko's poem published in the weekly. Investigators interrogated three-hundred people and conducted more than a dozen searches, seizing manuscripts, video recorders, and televisions. The investigation was closely followed by the United States government-funded Radio Liberty and politicians and human rights activists constantly talked about the fate of Yaremenko, Gadasik, and Jermolaewa. Due to the possibility of political repression and an open criminal case, she decided to flee the USSR. Through acquaintances from Lviv, she and other members of the editorial board of the Democratic Opposition asked for an invitation from unknown people to Krakow. An unknown woman there helped them find one of the shopping tours to Vienna that appeared for the Poles. They managed to cross the border with a Soviet passport. In their first three weeks in Austria, Jermolaewa and her partners spent their nights on benches in the Wien Westbahnhof railway station, without food, before they ended up in a refugee camp in Traiskirchen.

Solo shows

2018

  • Anna Jermolaewa, Galerie Johann Widauer, Vienna, Austria
  • Anna Jermolaewa, Zwei linke Füße, Kunstraum Weikendorf, Austria
  • Anna Jermolaewa / Recurrence, Zeller van Almsick, Vienna
  • Anna Jermolaewa, Kremlin Doppelganger, Alkovi, Helsinki

2017

  • Flag / Reenactment, Museum of the History of Photography, in frame of Festival “Contemporary Art in the Traditional Museum”, St. Petersburg, Russia
  • 2016
  • Anna jermolaewa, Galerie Johann Widauer, Vienna  
  • Anna Jermolaewa, Beide Weiß, 21er Haus, Vienna  
  • Anna Jermolaewa. A Noble Experiment, Kunsthaus Nexus, Saalfelden
  • Anna Jermolaewa - Kerstin Engholm Galerie, Vienna

2015

  • Anna Jermolaewa. Dobrze czasy, złe czasy / Good Times, Bad Times, WRO Art Center, Wrocław  
  • Kiss, Motherhood, Untitled by Anna Jermolaewa, The Function Room, London.  
  • Anna Jermolaewa. Good Times, Bad Times, Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw, Poland.

References

  1. ^ "Anna Jermolaewa". www.jermolaewa.com.
  2. ^ "Анна Ермолаева | Арт-сообщество".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Sabine Schaschl: Anna Jermolaewa". yumpu.com.
  4. ^ "Анна Ермолаева | Арт-сообщество".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ http://www.jermolaewa.com/pdf/tCwINCb0LXQvdC40L3QsC5wZGY.pdf. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)