Art Across Generations – Alex and Genie Belozersky

Acton, MA – YV Art Museum administered by Contemporary
Arts International (CAI), a non-profit organization, announces beginning season
for our 2023 Exhibition, we will feature the ex-hibition of father and daughter
in the main hall. Art Across Generations – Alex and Genie Beloz-ersky presents
the sculptures by Alex Belozersky and paintings by Genie Belozersky. The
exhibi-tion starts on May 21, 2023 through to September 17, 2023. In the Video
Room, we are presenting documentary films by Chen Bohan, a talented filmmaker
from Taiwan. The film explores the inspiration Chen found during his seven
visits to our art ground and showcases his earlier work. Over the years, many
people have been curious how Yin obtained this land; in Bohan's film, for the
first time, the story is fully told. Alex Belozersky came to art relatively
late in life, after several careers first in Russia, then in the U.S. “What
happened to me in my 40s and 50s may be compared with what the Apostles felt
when ‘They were filled with the Holy Ghost and began speaking in tongues they
did not speak before,’ he says. “Almost overnight, I, a professional pianist,
transitioned from music to the vis-ual arts.” Alex began his artistic
exploration with clay—as tactile and responsive as piano keys. He spent two years
at the Radcliffe College Ceramics studio in Cambridge, building non-functional
ce-ramic vessels, sculptures, and tiles. The latter, shown in the spring of
1991 at Boston Design Center, generated considerable interest due to their
Russian medieval and Renaissance designs. He then moved on to sculpting roofing
paper, tin, sheet metal, bronze, and wire, learning in the process what each
material allows and inspires. His choice of imagery was, to a degree, dictated
by the medium. But childhood memories, European history, theater, literature,
and mythology also served as sparks for his imagination. Alex’s philosophical
studies, especially the writings of Carl Jung, have stimulated him to address
the role of myths and dreams in modern life. Ancient and modern mythology is
represented in the culture as an elaborate interplay of archetypes, sym-bols,
and interpretations. Belozersky has created a stage where these symbols come to
life and comment on our existence. Humor is feature of many of his works: “I
think humor gives us a chance to step aside from reality to have a better view
of it, and keeps us from drowning in the tragedy of life.” Alex Belozersky,
musician, philosopher, sculptor, and poet, was born in Russia and graduated
from Moscow Conservatory. He taught music and wrote for art magazines before
emigrating to the U.S. in 1980. ~ Genie Belozersky, born in Boston, has been
surrounded by art since childhood, including her father’s work. Her parents
especially favored folk art, but Genie found drawing and painting her most
satisfying way to express ideas, feelings, and reflections on the world. An
avid museum goer, she has been inspired by a wide range of artists and styles,
with Surrealism in particular resonating with her for its combination of
fantasy and folklore. Genie’s distinctive use of small, detailed, precisely
drawn imagery emerged in her college years. She favors drawing with pens and
markers: their smoothness and crispness, the polished look they yield and the
freedom of working anywhere, give her maximum opportunity to develop her
pieces. The process of meticulously building up pictures through the
aggregation of finely-penned components is a form of meditation for Genie; it
allows her to both process her emotions and free herself from the churning mind.
They are also, as is the case with her father, a whimsical outlet for life’s
challenges. “I enjoy the cartoonish forms, the juxtapositions of shapes, the
process of weaving my way across the page,” Genie says. “But I also welcome my
viewers to project their own perceptions and ideas on my work and take away the
meaning that speaks to them.”Genie received her B.A. from New England School of
Art and Design. She has shown her work at a number of galleries in the Boston
area. ~
CAI is open to visitors everyday 10AM-6PM (summer schedule), visitors
are encouraged to phone or text 617-699-6401 to make appointment. The admission
fee is $10 for adults, $5 for over 65 or under 16.