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<- Yulia Batyrova and Marat Mukhametov
Bio

Yulia Batyrova and Marat Mukhametov see their sculptures as the motion of multiple elements, constantly changing their shape. The frozen form of the sculpture is just a primitive way to embrace endless motion, although only it remains truly real and denies any form. Artists only follow this motion without interfering in it.

On the edge of sculpture and ceramics, they have developed the signature technique for creating seemingly floating, weightless objects that interact with concrete conceptually.

Yulia Batyrova and Marat Mukhametov are constantly experimenting with porcelain, looking for the shape of elements and texture that will match the theme of the statement of different series. Artistic style is constantly changing and developing, which corresponds to the main task — to follow the motion without interfering in it.

Concrete was initially supposed to be just a stable, neutral, reliable pedestal. However, when artists first installed the sculpture on a concrete base, magic happened: there was a contrast between static and changeable, natural and man-made. The combination of concrete and porcelain speaks about the human loss of harmony with nature and the infertility of attempts to restore it. Now the motive for the search for harmony is present in one way or another in all their works.

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CV

EXHIBITIONS:


2020 POST/TRUISM. Group exhibition of contemporary artists (Moscow, Russia)
2020 Group exhibition of artistic ceramics «022-12» (Moscow, Russia)
2020 Hotel-butik MOSS «Natural Phenomenon» (Moscow, Russia)
2020 Exhibition Wondercraft / Episode 1 at TheDotHome Gallery (Moscow, Russia)
2020 Exhibition 1000 vases as part of Paris Design Week (Paris, France)
2020 Exhibition «Four Room» Gallery Art Design Human Studio and London Connoisseur Gallery (London. UK) 2020 Exhibition Wondercraft / Episode 2 at Designdealer Gallery (Moscow, Russia)
2020  «Vivus Domum» Group exhibition of contemporary art in the mansion Trubetskoy-Naryshkins, Gallery Art Design Human Studio (St. Petersburg, Russia)
2020, 2021  Blazar artfair — exhibition of young contemporary art, Gallery Art Design Human Studio (Moscow, Russia)
2021 Exhibition «Shapes of Comfort», Gallery Art Design Human Studio, Art Biesenthal (Berlin, Germany)
2021 Exhibition 1000 vases as part of Milan Design Week (Milan, Italy)
2021 Exhibition of art ceramics «Renaissance» at studio Dirty Hands (Moscow, Russia)
2021 Veha.art — Exhibition and charity auction «SVOI» (Moscow, Russia)
2023 Exhibition «Planet B: Art and Nature» in Uluhanli Gallery (Moscow, Russia)
2023 February 24 - March 7 Exhibition «Wounds leave scars» at Mia Karlova Gallery (Amsterdam, NL)
2023 Exhibition «Open the gates», UPSD Gallery (Istanbul, Turkiye)
2023 Exhibition and charity auction «I have a daughter in Anatolia», Mustafa Kemal Cultural Center (Istanbul, Turkiye) 2023 Online Exhibition «Everything is univocal», Resistance and Opposition Arts Review
2023 Art Fair BAD+Bordeaux with Mia Karlova Gallery (Bordeaux, France)
2023 Exhibition «Cloud Nine» with Muse Contemporary Gallery (Bodrum, Turkiye)
2023 Exhibition «Range Rover House» with Muse Contemporary Gallery (Bodrum, Turkiye)
2023 Art Fair Contemporary Istanbul 2023 with Muse Contemporary Gallery (Istanbul, Turkiye)
2023 Exhibition «Back to the city» with Muse Contemporary Gallery (Istanbul, Turkiye)

AWARDS:

2020  Competition «Invented and Made in Russia», Finalist (Moscow, Russia)
2021  Martinsons Award, Mark Rothko Art Centre, Finalist (Daugavpils, Latvia)
2023 Selected for contest «Emerging artist 2023» by Ceramic Monthly
2023  Martinsons Award, Mark Rothko Art Centre, Finalist (Daugavpils, Latvia)
2024  3rd price at the international Ceramics Biennale, Yingge Ceramic Museum (Taiwan)
2024 International Ceramics Biennale, Guangdong Shiwan Ceramics Museum, Finalist (China) 2024 Bizen Contemporary Ceramics Biennale, Finalist (Japan)
2024 XIII International Ceramics Biennial of El Vendrell, Finalist (Spain)

RESIDENCIES AND SYMPOSIUMS:

2023 19th World General Assembly of International Assocation of Art — official partner of UNESCO «Humanity in Exile Conditions of the Artists and Intellectuals Under Oppression» exhibited works and contributed as speaker 
2025 Saint-Quentin-la-Poterie, Invited resident artists ( France)

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Interview
Yulia Batyrova, ceramist artist from Moscow and nominee competition, spoke about the process of creating sculptures and finding her place on the map of contemporary Russian art

Q. Has your experience as a professional in graphic design and a design set of mind influenced your work with ceramic?
А. Yes, definitely. If this experience helped me at first, it played a cruel joke on me at a later stage.

The qualities that were very useful for a designer and that I have nurtured in myself for years, such as logic, empathy, the ability to subordinate and work in the interests of a client, have long constrained me as an artist. And even my view on a good taste, a sense of proportion, color and composition still prevents me from trying to go beyond my own limitations sometimes. For example, I cannot create something brutal, rough or uncomfortable, and I suffer a lot from this. I am grateful for the designer’s experience, but I am glad that this page has been turned and I can no longer think about the interests of others, but endulge my selfishness and engage into creation as a personal experience.

Q. Your artworks take attention and perseverance — is this a certain way of meditation? What attracts you more: the process of creating objects or the result? How did you come to combine thin and delicate porcelain with chamotte and stone mass?
A. It is a sort of meditation or compulsion. I am a worrier, and this painstaking creation of an object from many components calms my mind and orders thoughts. And, of course, most of all I am attracted to the process of making, there is a lot of mental work in the beginning: looking for the shape of the future object, almost losing sleep and making sketches on everything that comes to hand, and then after all the efforts assembling it from small parts. This switch in my creation process suits me very well, it allows me not to burn out. Usually, I lose all interest once the piece is finished.

When I first tried working with porcelain, I was fascinated by its color, silk texture and translucency. I wanted to reveal and highlight these amasing properties. Reflecting on this, I came to the conclusion that this could be done in contrast, by putting together two seemingly inappropriate materials and merging them into one form. Looking into the future, I would like to combine porcelain with concrete, metal or plastic in order to challenge the physical and cultural attributes of the materials.

Q. Recently, your work has been developing in the direction of sculpture, what prompted you to make this choice? Where do you find your inspiration? Your objects breathe nature, but as far as we understand, do they also have a psychological context?
A. I was engaged in a routine and service type of work for quite a long time. When I came to ceramics, I also began to make utilitarian objects, but quickly I realised that I wanted them to be just beautiful without aiming at solving needs, but rather demonstrating unreasonable liberty. Since I have always been interested in three-dimensional images and forms, as well as the variety of such expressions, my appeal to sculpture turned out to be very native to me.

As for inspiration, I have no specific and permanent sources. I could turn even to politics or nature. Butterflies are the subject of my latest interest, I can look at them for hours. When I immerse myself into the process of making, I have no interest in the outside world, focusing solely on the form, my own methods and ideas.

Any creativity is a deeply personal experience. The internal work is always reflected in my pieces and, of course, has a psychological context.

Q. The last sculpture “Breathe In / Breathe Out” reminded us of the artwork by Rowan Mersh, which he presented at the Nomad art fair several years ago. Do you think artists have a collective unconscious?
A. Perhaps it is so that the voice of an artist speaks the "collective unconscious" of the human race, much wiser and more powerful than the personal «I am» of the author. I definitely will not dare to call myself one of the megaphones of such "collective unconscious":) The ability to collect an object from a thousand elementary particles and observe them as if through a microscope fascinates and inspires me. Many artists work in this direction: Rowan Mersh constructs his objects from shells, Junko Mori from metal, Sere Garcia from fabric, Korean artist Kwang Yong Chan from pieces of silk paper, and Kate McGwire makes objects and installations from feathers. 

Q. Do you have favorite artists? What is more important for you to belong to a certain school or to be an independent artist?
A. I definitely would not deliberately join any associations or schools, but if my work is given a strict definition and attributed to a certain style, I will not oppose to it)

When I first started out with ceramics, I followed many potters to learn about their techniques, so I collected endless boards on pinterest. These are a few authors who impressed me (in fact, there are many more): Stine Jespersen, Yo Akiyama, Tom Bartel, Yukiya Izumita, Tomomi Tanaka, Phillip Eglin, Petra Wolf, Mary Bowron, Gordon Baldwin and others.

Today I try to keep it fresh and stay away from seeking inspiration from other ceramists and generally minimize the viewing of artworks (with the exception of exhibitions), because getting rid of other people's ideas that grow into the most secluded corners of our minds is much more difficult than finding the new ones.

Q. The sculpture "И" was shortlisted for the Second Russian Competition-Biennale of Object Design «Invented and Made in Russia» organised by The All-Russian Decorative Art Museum. A special category that did not exist before the announcement of the contest was created for you and a few other artists - Fine Craft. How significant is it for you to be shortlisted from more than 2000 applicants, and what does this nomination mean for you?
A. This came as a complete surprise to me and therefore a great joy. Probably, this helped me in a sense to come out from my own workshop, to look at my work from the outside and connect my actions with works of other artists, as well as to see my place on the map of the modern Russian fine craft today. 

Q. What difficulties do you go through as an artist daily and what kind of support would you like to receive?
A. Frankly speaking, I usually have difficulties only with myself, and as for support, it is still completely unclear to me how a Russian artist can be integrated into the international context. Art education in Russia is a rather vaguely organised system, and the art market is even less defined. There is a feeling of being in a vacuum and it is not always obvious who and why (besides myself) needs my art.

I would like to explore other materials: polymers, epoxy, fiberglass, composite, glass, etc., but I have a very little idea how to work with them. I know that in Europe there is a network of workshops —if you enter the Fine Arts department in an art school, you would be able to try different mediums, look for new means of expression and generally feel free to explore. It seems to me that there is still no such opportunity to learn about yourself and your capabilities in Russia.

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