Wedding of the Tower and the Metro

2006, Performance, Public Ritual, , Urban Mythology, Video

About the Project

Background: The Question of the Tower and the Metro

The Myth

The Ritual — The Wedding

Additional Context

The Performance

Outcome

Exhibitions and Screenings

Möbius Pretzel

2006, Performance, Public Ritual, , Urban Mythology, Video

From the author:

A city is a multitude of layers — coexisting within a single whole, yet often not only disconnected, but unaware of each other’s existence.

A simplified model of the city might be imagined as a pretzel made from a multi-layered sponge ribbon, twisted into a Möbius strip — a kind of “pretzelization” of a mathematical ideal.

The Möbius strip possesses some curious properties: it has only one continuous surface, no “other” side, no inside or outside, and any object moving along it is gradually turned 180 degrees. In other words — it flips things upside down.

This leads one to think that perhaps our existence has no “reverse.” Everything — hellish abysses, heavenly gardens, mysterious depths of the spirit, and other dimensions — is already here, now, with us, on this side. That is to say: thisworldly.

To “absorb” the city, one must thoroughly chew the pretzel. This can be done extensively — gnawing on a single layer, or intensively — by biting through all the layers at once. Though in this case, of course, only within the limits of one fragment.

Shoot for Color. Yekaterinburg

2004,

The artist duo R² first invented the format of a photo marathon in 2004, when they launched their first Color Hunting actions. They spent entire days walking through the city, trying to capture colors and their subtle shades. Later they sorted the photographs into folders by hue, creating an unexpected portrait of the city through its colors and time.

Lullaby for the River

2003, Environmental Performance, Performance

Artist’s Note:

This performance is a quiet ritual of care and absurdity.
A lullaby—not for a child, but for the city’s river — burdened, ignored, polluted, yet still flowing.
The Penguin, a creature from a distant world played by a child, becomes a gentle mediator:
he sings not with words, but with breath through wood, a lullaby for something that cannot sleep.

Fish, once swimming in the depths, lie arranged on land : a gesture of remembrance and paradox.
The fish oil glimmers like relics or offerings — both nourishing and useless at once.

This is a moment of stillness amid noise.
A small act of poetic compassion to honor the river as a living being, reminding the city that even the absurd can be an act of tenderness and deeply necessary empathy.

It doesn’t solve problems, but it changes the tone.
It is a lullaby for a world that can no longer respond — and still deserves to be sung to.

“Lullaby for the River” is a poetic performance about care, loss, and quiet attention to a vulnerable world.

Corridor

2002

Artist’s Note:
I wanted to mark a passage: not just a path, but a shift in perception.
When you step into a space where even the grass and asphalt are the same bright color, your body reacts: the city becomes less neutral.
It’s about tuning your attention like walking through a thought.