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Alexander Volkov was born in St.Petersburg
(then Leningrad), Russia in 1960. He started painting with oil as a
high school student. From the age of 7 to 17 he attended a special
English school and in 1986 graduated from the Department of Physics
at Leningrad State University. Following graduation, Alexander
worked as an animator at Leningrad Studio of Science Films and later
as a stage artist in a small Leningrad theatre.
In 1981 he began to exhibit his paintings
with a group of 200 Leningrad artists known as the "Brotherhood of
Experimental Arts", a conglomeration of "underground" art groups
active in Leningrad at the time. Later, he joined a splinter group
called "Ostrov" or "Island" which united 30 artists who felt that,
ideologically, their work was neither socialist realism nor extreme
avant garde.
Since moving to the U.S. in 1990 he has
worked as a teacher and exhibited his paintings in Princeton and
Lambertville, New Jersey, New Hope, Pennsylvania, Carmel, Laguna
Beach and San Francisco, California and Park City, Utah. Alexander's
paintings have also been exhibited in Russia, Sweden, Germany and
Finland. Reluctantly, he calls himself a "self-taught" artist. "We
really teach ourselves.
If you want to learn, you will always find
someone to learn from, be they dead or alive, great or unknown. You
learn from everything you see and hear around you - if you are
willing to pay attention. Perhaps, during my forming years, I have
made a lot of unnecessary mistakes, but at the same time I have had
the enormous advantage of picking my own teachers." And so they
were: William Turner, Vermeer, Franz Hals, Rembrandt and many others
from the previous centuries as well as Edward Hopper, Maxfield
Parrish and Andrew Wyeth of the 20th century.
They also were Beethoven and Satie,
Nabokov and Steinbeck, Einstein and Tarkovsky. They were school and
university friends, physics professors and struggling artists. "They
have all taught me something - how to see, how to hear, how to
understand things and, most importantly, how to understand myself. I
cannot separate any one of their voices from the voice which I hear
inside of me and which has become my own voice."
Combining a lifelong fascination with
architecture, landscape and still-life subjects, Alexander brings
drama and poetic expression into his work. With his unique vision,
he merges mood and atmosphere, evoking powerful emotions that create
harmony. "There is no greater mystery to me than the conflict of
light and dark. In the way they clash and penetrate each other,
there is the source of everything.
Whether I paint a landscape, a still-life
or a portrait, within it there is always a story of light traveling
through darkness." Alexander now lives in Holland Township, New
Jersey with his wife Barbara and their three children, Alice, Peter
and Nicholas. |