Urmas Pedanik. Transitions
Curator Tamara Luuk
Urmas Pedanik’s solo exhibition “Transitions” to open at Tallinn City Gallery on Friday, 17 July at 4 pm
The sixth solo exhibition of painter Urmas Pedanik will open at the City Gallery on Friday, 17 July. “Transitions” deals with a conflict between the artificial and the natural, testifying that the power of the beauty around us is far from faded. The curator of the exhibition is Tamara Luuk.
According to the curator, Urmas Pedanik is best known for his paintings depicting the industrial world of electronics, with which he left his mark in the history of Estonian art in the 1970s: “These works introduced in Estonia a pure, unprecedented photorealistic camera eye erasing the personality of the author, which became a landmark both in our art history as well as his own work.”
Pedanik held his first solo exhibition in 1981. After a long pause, his next show took place at the City Gallery in 2010. Analogue technology in the artist’s pictures had been replaced by digital, and the manual skills previously used to create a painterly image had given way to computer processing.
In “Transitions”, the painted canvas with self-contained electronic gadgets evolves into a story that unfolds from the conflict between nature and the world of technology. An anonymous mechanical machine pushes through the reeds, invading the lake surface, the sky and the space between the mountains like a menacing army, until the artist finally chooses a side and … ends the exhibition with a realistic-looking waterfall free from any interferers. The image based on a computer-processed photograph features a simple, almost romantic motif of a powerful cascade.
Accompanying the exhibition will be the third catalogue documenting the artist’s work, with text written by Tamara Luuk.
Urmas Pedanik. “Transitions” at Tallinn City Gallery from 18 July until 6 September 2020.
Urmas Pedanik was born in 1949 in Pärnu. In 1974–1980 he studied industrial art at the State Art Institute. Pedanik has been exhibiting at national overview exhibitions since 1972. Last year he was awarded the Konrad Mägi Prize and Medal. Two catalogues of the artist’s works have been published previously: in 2011 accompanying his solo exhibition at Hobusepea Gallery (text by Kädi Talvoja) and in 2018 for a solo exhibition at Draakoni Gallery (text by Andreas Trossek).