Breadcrumb

Events

Forest fairy tales bound by Estonian designer bookbinders
In the Library of Tallinn University of Technology
3.-21. August 2021
 
The members of the Estonian Binding Artists' Association introduce unique bindings of the stories of fairy tales and forest fairy tales.
 
A fairy tale is a story based on a deliberate invention, which contradicts logic, the laws of nature and does not care about a certain historical environment. There is a great deal of discussion about forests in society today, because the forest is being cut down carelessly, forgetting that the forest is a living system that needs a smart, attentive and caring attitude. Forest fairy tales help us to recall the connection with nature and its creatures. Forest-themed works also have a significant place in Estonian and foreign literature.
Alexei Gordin's solo exhibition “How could it happen?”
Alexei Gordin's exhibition’s “How could it happen?” opening will take place on Thursday, August 5, from 7 pm to 9 pm. DJ NIKA will play the music and Kalamaja Brewery supports the event. Visitors who feel healthy are welcome.
 
ArtDepoo locates in Tallinn at Jahu 12-213.
Exhibition “Wearing a Hundred Shirts”
Wearing a Hundred Shirts will be opened at the Art Hall Gallery on 5 August at 6 pm. The exhibition looks at the T-shirt as an object of material culture in Estonia. Items borrowed from memory institutions, private collections and directly from manufacturers include works of design and art, shirts with a political message, curiosities and ordinary utilitarian shirts, which are used to outline the important issues and developments in the recent past.
 
The exhibition displays shirts by very different authors: Reet Aus, Kertu Ehala and Ave Teeääre, Marco Laimre, Laivi Suurväli, Peeter Sepp, Saima Priks, Juku-Kalle Raid, and Johannes Säre among others.
 
The curators of the exhibition are Sten Ojavee (CCA) and Siim Preiman.
 
During the 20th century the T-shirt became one of the most widely worn fashion items.
Sven Parker “Walls, panels, fragments”
Sven Parker will open his personal exhibition “Walls, panels, fragments” in Draakon gallery at 6pm on Tuesday, August 3rd, 2021. Exhibition will be open until August 28th, 2021.
 
This exhibition is inspired by one of the first “westernized” comic book series published in Estonia in the 1990s. Western narratives and characters entered Estonian storytelling soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, marking the beginning of a paradigmatic shift. As the cold war ended, the capitalist ideology reached Eastern Europe and brought about expansive commodification and transition to a new liberal-democratic mode of governance.
 
American political scientist Francis Fukuyama has described this time period as “the end of history”, the disappearance of great historical narratives based on the tension and ideological opposition between East and West.
Huupi. 14:23. 2021. Oil, canvas. Photo Huupi.
Huupi isikunäitus “Päeva Palee”
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Opening of the exhibition Day Palace by Huupi is on the 6th of August at 6 o'clock PM.
 
Exhibition Day Palace depicts Huupi’s attempt to decode something that is not dependent on people - the changing of colours in time and something descriptive and imaginary - time itself in which we measure ourselves.
 
Day Palace is a series of paintings that combines colour and architecture, light and shadow. The titles of the works are timestamps that mark the movement of light in time and space.
Darja Popolitova. Video still “How to Speak a Foreign Language Without Mistakes”
The exhibition “Tactilite: Stone that Tickles the Gaze” by jewellery artist Darja Popolitova will open in Hobusepea gallery at 6pm on August 5thHobusepea gallery. The solo show incorporates five video works, jewellery and installations that will create a fictional world where witch Seraphita helps to cope with the frustrations of everyday life.
 
“Seraphita is a fictional character who helps me to expand the usual functions of jewellery.
XXI Kohila Symposium
XXI Kohila Symposium closing ceremony will take place on Saturday 31.07 at 19:00 at the Tohisoo Manor. Liz Wirestring will perform on harp. Heat will be added by the parallel program: opening of the fire sculpture in front of the audience. The petal kiln has been built by kiln master Andres Allik, the fire sculpture by Sander Raudsepp.
 
Artists around the world have spent 3 weeks in Kohila. They have been creating ceramic scluptures that are wood-fired in an Anagama kiln. The topic this year is light! Created ceramic sculptures will be lit by light artist Rene Manivald Tamm.
The final exhibition will take place at the Kohila Paper Factory and stays open until the next day, 1. August.
 
Program:
19:00 Opening at the Tohisoo manor (EST)
20:00 Exhibition and guided tour at the Kohila Paper factory (EST/ENG/RUS)
Triin Kerge and Aksel Haagensen “Off We Go!”
On Friday, 30 July at 5 p.m. Triin Kerge and Aksel Haagensen will open their exhibition “Off We Go!” in the large gallery of Tartu Art House.
 
The exhibition is based on the stories of people who fled as children from Estonia in 1944 or were deported as children to Siberia in 1949. The artists place these two narratives from Estonian history into a dialogue and question the cultural understandings that exist around the deportations and the exodus of refugees.
 
Triin Kerge presents to the viewer six women who were deported as children to Siberia in 1949, focusing on the personal aspects of collective memory.
Exhibition by Robin Nõgisto näitus “Picture People”
Just as the giant lizard in Robin Nõgisto’s painting and the tiny green dinosaur on the screen of a computer disconnected from Internet know that they belong together, Robin himself is convinced that “the world I paint does indeed exist somewhere.” The exhibition Picture People will be opened at Tallinn City Gallery on Thursday, 29 July at 6 pm.
 
The curator of the exhibition is Tamara Luuk.
 
Robin Nõgisto’s exhibition Picture People features three large two-part paintings, four film and music videos, as well as a few other artworks. The artist features visionary worlds full of vibrant characters, connected by an absence of hierarchies, a strange reality and a passion for life. Canvas after canvas, cats, dogs, lizards, hipsters, skeletons, and aliens appear in various, always striking constellations.
Online exhibition “Dark Finitude” by Sten Saarits
 
Dark Finitude is an interactive sound based and nonvisual web-exhibition by the Estonia-based artist Sten Saarits hosted by post-gallery.online. The exhibition is essentially a dark screen that welcomes viewers on an auditory journey taking place in a nighttime forest setting, accompanied by a voice addressing the boundless, curved and unknown landscape.
 
Dark Finitude has no true ending or a beginning. The set up is much like a sandbox game where the visitor has an option to construct their own route by clicking on different areas of the screen on their handheld or desktop devices. Every click takes the participant further on a chosen path and a sound clip accompanies every advancement.