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Artvera’s Gallery Geneva FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT: Rue Etienne Dumont 1 1204 Geneva, Switzerland Tel: +41 (0)22 311 05 53 [email protected] ARTVERA’S GALLERY PRESENTS CONTEMPORARY BOOM! Patrick Mimran, Dollar, 2003, inkjet on Hahnemuhle rag barite paper 310gr, Diasec, 200 x 85 cm GENEVA, SWITZERLAND − Artvera’s gallery has its grand opening event on Thursday, November 27th at 6 pm. The exhibit will highlight the works of nineteen contemporary artists including the famous French multimedia artist Patrick Mimran working with painting, photography, video art, sculpture and installations. He mixes contemporary references with historical films. Justine Smith through her collages, prints and sculptures examines our relationship with money in a political, moral and social sense, exploiting as well the physical beauty of the note. Award winning and internationally renowned, her works are at Collections of the British Council and the UK Government Art Collection. of the world through comics and streets complete sentence. Jean-Luc Sollberger, Switzerland Medicin Man, mixed media on canvas, 122 x 156 cm Justine Smith, Bigger Bang Black, 2014, Diamond Dust Edition. Inkjet print on 330gsm Somerset Satin Enhanced paper, with black diamond dust, 92 x 120 cm Award winning artist Loz Atkinson, provocative hopeful her visions adopt themes of mortality, emotion, truth, time, movement, environment and morality. She plays with perceptions of what is seen and not seen, using bold shape, line, form, colour and symbolism. Photographer Zoe Childerley finds hidden beauty in otherworldly portrait and landscape. Loz Atkinson, Untitled, 2014, Exterior Eggshell, Acrylic, Metallic Ink on Canva, 50 x 70 x 4 cm While Roys People is all about creating images and installations using miniature figures, taxidermy and everyday items. Zoe Childerley, Impossible triangle. Solar Fields, Nevada, 2014, photo collage, 80 x 60 cm The Swiss based street art painter JeanLuc Sollberger with its bold coloured canvases depicts playful images Roys People, Graffiti, mixed media, 52 x 52 cm Emily Gray, Twiggy, 2014, Perspex, 72 x 50 cm Yanko Tihov gained recognition with his passport series that are unique examples of contemporary cartography. In this age of ubiquitous “Selfies” Lisa Cirenza explores the latest digital technologies to unify the human society culturally, emotionally and physically. She is an award winner of east-west art price in Kyoto Japan. Yanko Tihov, Europe Cold War, 2014, archival print, hand gilded with 23 carat shell gold, 61 x 83.7 cm Emily Gray with its bold, bright distinctive images in layered laser cut Perspex create a wall sculpture. Lisa Cirenza, Tubers, 2014, acrylic on Board, 70 x 100 cm The exhibit also included the famous Swiss photographer Patrick Weidmann who for more than 20 years captures objects persuading us that we live in the realm of commodities, in a world that is so mercenary that it now fills the entire life of everyone on the planet. Patrick Weidmann, 291-32-1998-2, 1998, photographie et Diasec, 115 X 174 cm The show presents works by French artist Marion Six who explores the nudes and captures emotions and moods of the bodies. Elliot Henning, Ice Cream, 2014, peinture à l’aérographe sur toile, 100 x 70 cm South Korean Sangsik Hong whose sculptures of lips, eyes and faces symbolize semantic relationships and the structure of desires connotes the pathos of reality. Marion Six, Tendresse, 2014, huile sur toile, 162 cm x 114 cm Graffiti artist Eliot Henning reflects the worlds through bright spray painted objects. Sangsik Hong, Lips, 2014, straw, 49.5x49x18.5 cm Myung Nam An, South Korean ceramist, whose abstract appropriated images from todays culture and translates these onto the surface. Adam Green, Crosstown Monitors, acrylic on linen, 100 x 100 cm Myung Nam An, Eyes, 2014, ceramics Aurélie Menaldo constructs nonobjective assemblages from found objects. Aurélie Menaldo, Mur de Glaces, 2014, mixed media, 160 x 100 cm Adam Green plays with repetition and colourful images to unite material and visual. Ant Pearce's practice, influenced by Freud’s theories, focuses on the concept that man is condemned to exist imprisoned. Through his work. He explores the fragility of life, drawing on human psychology. Ant Pearce, Kate #1#3, 2014, cotton thread sewn on paper, 59.4 x 84.1 cm Drawing influence from Punk, Situationism and the Goons, Tim Carson constructs mechanisms and machines on boards to promote a physical interaction between the viewer and the work. Tim Carson, It’s not worth it, airbrush on canvas, 17.5 x 22 cm Frederic Béziat, jeweller himself, depicts precious stones and fine jewellery pieces in his compositions. Frédéric Beziat, Profils, mixed media, 2014, 140 x 70 cm ABOUT ARTVERA’S Artvera’s is a Geneva-based art gallery specializing in European and Russian masters of modern art. Since opening its doors in 2007, Artvera’s has offered museum-quality exhibitions and promoted the discovery and rediscovery of prominent artists, sometimes overlooked by art historians and scholars. To complement the stable of twentieth century Modern masters, Artvera’s also showcases noteworthy nationally and internationally established and emerging contemporary artists. The 5,400 square-foot gallery occupies a lovingly restored medieval building in the heart of Geneva’s old town. The gallery has presented individual and group exhibitions, including “Der Blauer Reiter, Die Brücke, The Knave of Diamond” (2008-2009), “Serge Charchoune: Retrospective” (20092010), “Pointillism” (2011), “Friedrich Karl Gotsch” (2011-2012), “Gérard Schneider” (20122013), “René Rimbert” (2013-2014), “S.P.R.A.Y” (2014), “Swiss Photo” (2014), “Lavrenty Bruni” (2014) and “Metaphysical Landscapes” (2014). Artvera’s collaborates closely with museums, and regularly lends artworks to prestigious exhibitions worldwide. The gallery is led by director Sofia Komarova. Schooled in St. Petersburg and Geneva, Komarova possesses a vast wealth of knowledge and a wide range of expertise in acquisition and appraisal.