Hygienic Art Galleries
Features: Opening Saturday October 18,
7-10pm
'Universal Memory'
The
Hygienic Art Galleries is proud to present the
exhibition,"Universal Memory" featuring the fantastic and
surrealist paintings of Czech Republic artist/sculptor Boris Jirku,
Prague, CZ. painter and actor Katia Jirankova Levanti and Hygienic
Co-op resident artist Troy Zaushny. The paintings and prints are
inspired by the life experiences and memories of the artists and
their visual interpretations in oils, acrylic mediums and
multi-layered prints.
Opening Reception:
Saturday October 18, 2008, 7–10 pm
Refreshments will be served
and music will be provided by Supercool,
a three piece band, led by Daniel Levanti and musicians from
Nashville. Together they have performed in clubs and cafes throughout
Europe.
Exhibition Dates: October 18– November 15,
2008
***Special Announcement***Visiting
from Prague, Boris
Jirku will be holding painting workshops performing his art making
techniques and creating "art of the moment" for local
artists and interested patrons on Wednesday, October 22 and
Wednesday, November 5 at 7 PM in the Salon des Independents
Gallery at Hygienic Art, 79 Bank Street New London.
Gallery hours
are Thursday 11am-3pm, Friday 11am-6pm, Saturday 11am-6pm and Sunday
12noon-3pm
Hygienic
Art Galleries
79-83 Bank Street
New London, CT
06320
860.443.8001
www.hygienic.org
Gallery
Hours: Thursday 11–3, Friday 11–6, Saturday 11-3, Sunday
12–3
*Katia Jirankova Levanti a Czech artist now residing between Waterford and Praque, was born to
a Russian mother and Czech father. Her childhood was marked by
flights to Moscow to visit her maternal grandmother, a famous actress
from Stanislavsky's legendary theater. Though they were cautious not
to flaunt their Russian in public, her and her mother, Lena, always
felt most at home in their mother tongue. But in Prague the
atmosphere was icy. Vaclav Havel was still musing a long way from his
presidency of the 90's, and Katia's father's artistic genius was
gaining him no friends in the communist ranks. He was a political,
satirical cartoonist who was more than once prohibited from working
and forced to live off the small income of Lena's translations alone.
Some of the most progressive minds in the country would congregate in
Katia's childhood home, well aware of the bugs planted in the walls
by the secret police, and aware of a privacy relegated solely to
thoughts expressed below a whisper amongst themselves, or through the
most cunning means (Such as through children's cartoons, which her
Father also became famous for). These comrades would later become
Havel's minister of foreign affairs, another the prime minister, and
her father was honored by the president himself as a foremost
prominent figure of Czech culture. These were the environs which
molded Katia's artistic ambitions and memories. She studied
Philosophy and linguistics at Prague's Charles University and
Universita per Stranieri, Perugia, Italy and later with the great
Boris Jirku, then Professor at the Praque's prestigious Art
Conservatory. The meditative, trance-like state from which her work
comes is the birth ground of epiphany itself and Katia brings forth
her visions of a world even more secretive and unknown than those
magical streets of her Prague childhood.
In creating the exhibition, Katia was asked by Hygienic Art to select the most inspiring artist from the Czech Republic. Her choice, Boris Jirku was asked and accepted Hygienic Art's offer to exhibit his works with his fellow colleague. With generous funding from the Griffis Foundation for the transportation of Jirku and his artwork, this local and international art exhibition became a reality.

Katia Jirankova Levanti, Temporal Archer, Oil on Canvas
*Boris Jirku constantly engages in drawing, painting,
illustration, graphics and sculpture. He shows his works both home
and abroad and participated on many corporate exhibitions around the
world. His works also reflects memories and experiences of his life
and artistry being oppressed by the communist led government.
In 1982 he is held in solitary confinement in a small studio in
Prague. There he was inspired to illustrate the writings of Márquez.
In 1984 Márquez is awarded Nobel Prize for literature. The
Odeon publishing house commissioned Boris Jirku˚ to illustrate
Márquez's "Chronicle of a Death" foretold in short
reprieve (the commission was based on Jirku's previous drawings of
the novel in the "Svetová literatura" [World
Literature] revue. For this artwork, Jirku was awarded first place in
the competition for the year's most beautiful book in CSSR . In 1990
he again won the award for most beautiful book in CSSR for Bulgakov's
Master and Margarita. The illustrations (together with those of
Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude) are today archived in
the National Literature Memorial in Prague.
Boris Jirku teaches figure drawing at VSUP. He founded and leads public figure drawing instruction and figure drawing workshops for Palacky University in Olomouc, West Bohemian University in Plzen, College of Restoring Techniques in Litomysl, Masaryk University in Brno and Fachhochschule Mainz. He holds FIGURAMA exhibitions of works of students and educators from nine European universities in galleries and college areas in Leipzig, Znojmo, Brno, Prague, Vienna, Mainz, and Plzen .
Jirku was elected as Chairman of the Academic Senate of the University of Applied Arts in Prague and in 2002 was awarded prizes in the Czech Republic Print of the Year Competition and elevated to master professor of illustration and graphics by Czech Republic President Václav Havel.

Boris Jirku, S. Finlovel, Oil on Canvas
*Troy
Zaushny*, one of Hygienic Art Cooperative's newest resident
artists, is a professional career artist. Born and raised in
rural Connecticut, his initial inclination to art was sparked by
album cover art, posters and apocalyptic imagery found in religious
propaganda. From his youth Troy chose subject matter from
nature - animals primarily - rendering them sometimes
photo-realistically, and other times abstracting them into something
altogether fantastical. Attending the University of Connecticut, Troy
turned his focus towards printmaking, a method he was introduced to
in high school, through silk-screening t-shirts. It was the
multi-layered approach to image making that drew him to printmaking. At that time, Troy gained and maintained appreciation for artists
such as Albrecht Durer, Henry Rousseau, Michelangelo and Jean-Michel
Basquiat, though his muse for his own personal imagery came from some
thing less conventional.
As a boy, Troy discovered that
certain sounds – the babbling of a brook, the drone of bees, or the
electrical hum of a transformer - had a transcendental effect on
him. In short, those sounds not only gave him an expanded,
multi-sensory perception of the world as he knew it, but also
extended his visual imagination beyond what he perceived it to be.
Troy's attempt to communicate these experiences has been the driving
force behind his art works for the past twenty years. During
this time he has honed his skill and, more importantly, his process. His technique matches the depth of layers of his imagination so that,
finally, the artist seems comfortable with his stride.
In
"Universal Memory" Troy has compiled a body of
work that, taken as a whole, well exemplifies the evolution of his
creative vision and process. In its assembly he has managed to
create, in a fashion, his own retrospective. From early wood
and lino-cuts (reflections and interpretations of, then, unexplained
imaginings) to his latest realized poly-frescoes, Troy has come full
circle, moving from surreal abstracted imagery to more physically
realistic natural subject matter; gentle reminders from an older and
wiser artist of experiences common to us all, born in the quiet
stillness of a natural setting, when we allow ourselves the
connection to our individual and collected inspirations.

Troy Zaushny, Natural Reflection #3 - Coalescence" 2008
monoprint (wax matrix reduction)