Fyodor presents Fyodor’s Five Foundlings, a film documenting his guerrilla performances Foundlings, made between 2015 and completed in 2017 when he was was arrested and put in jail after being delivered in a box to the Met Gala in New York City.
About the Film
Fyodor’s Five Foundlings is a series of live interventions that explore the ‘foundling’, a historic term applied to children or newborn babies that were abandoned by parents and discovered by others. In medieval Europe, these ‘foundlings’ were commonly left in boxes. In a similar way, for this project, the artist wedges his body into a small and claustrophobic glassbox, using 18 screws. Whoever finds the box is faced with two options, either to break the glass or use a screwdriver to open it.
Each time the work is performed, the artist invites his four friends to deliver the box to the entrance of an institution or a venue hosting an expensive gala dinner of art-world VIPs, often people who may be on a journey of acceptance relating to performance art, and how it might (or might not) be collected.
The ‘box lifters’ sneak inside under the pretence of bringing something for a renowned curator or a museum director and the box is left at the venue. Once set inside or stopped by security guards in front of the entrance, lifters throw the belt used for carrying the box on the floor and flee the venue before anyone can catch them.
At this point the work is completely out of the artist’s control and depends on how the institution is equipped to cope handling, lifting or maneuvering the box
The aim of the performance is reached when the ‘donated’ work of live art (the artist’s own body) is discarded, banned or dismissed. In other words, by encouraging rejection of the object, the performance actually fulfils its objectives.
Biography
Fyodor Pavlov-Andreevich is a visual artist, curator and museum director, as well as writer, theatre director, and filmmaker. Exploring a distance between a work of art and its audience, he creates performances and site-specific installations, objects, guerrilla actions and long-durational works that he presents worldwide under curatorship of Hans Ulrich Obrist, RoseLee Goldberg, Klaus Biesenbach, and Marina Abramovic. Fyodor’s Performance Carousel was first shown in 2014 at Faena Arts Center in Buenos Aires, then in 2016 as the opening event of Wiener Festwochen in Vienna and received Grand Prix at Kuryokhin Art Prize 2015. Pavlov-Andreevich lives and works between Moscow (where he looks after an artist-run space, Solyanka), London and São Paulo.
About LADA Screens
LADA Screens is a series of free, online screenings of seminal performance documentation, works to camera, short films/video and archival footage. It is part of Live Online, LADA’s dedicated space where you can watch short videos and films drawn from LADA’s Study Room or generated through our programmes and initiatives.
Each screening will be available to view for a limited time only, and will be launched with a live event at our space in Bethnal Green, London. Online art magazine, thisistomorrow will also feature the films on their website for the duration of the screenings.
LADA Screens is curated by the Live Art Development Agency (LADA). LADA is a ‘Centre for Live Art’: a knowledge centre, a production centre for programmes and publications, a research centre setting artists and ideas in motion, and an online centre for digital experimentation, representation and dissemination.
For more information about LADA Screens please contact Alex Eisenberg.
The LADA Screens Open call 2018 is an annual programme which invites submissions of existing videos or films to show online as part of LADA Screens. Please sign up to our newsletter to be kept updates on future opportunities.