Nedko Solakov. The Miner’s Dream
Bulgarian artist Nedko Solakov began his career in the 1980s, after studying mural painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Sofia, and then training at the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp (HISK) in 1986.
He emerged onto the art scene in a tense socio-political context, Bulgaria being at the time under the influence of the Soviet regime. Very early on, he adopted a critical stance towards this regime, an attitude which he has maintained throughout his career by regularly addressing contemporary political and social issues.
Writing and storytelling occupy a central place in his work. Through text, Solakov infuses his works and installations with irony and humour imbued with gentle sarcasm and self-mockery.
A multidisciplinary visual artist, he explores the polysemy of language and ideas, playing with a multiplicity of supports and materials. His visual language, at first appearance naïve, in fact, conceals a complex practice, at once committed, poetic and playful.
With A Cornered Solo Show, Nedko Solakov has, since 2021, been installing his creations in the discreet corners of museums – often neglected passageways such as halls, stairwells or changing rooms. He arranges drawings, paintings, collages and handwritten texts, playing with the walls and their angles to create a form of marginal exhibition, engendering a dialogue of complicity between his work, the place and the visitors. His interventions address current issues – wars, ecology, institutional absurdities, and museum crises – in a tone that mixes sarcasm and personal reflections. By investing these ‘corners’, he transforms the periphery into an introspective, critical space.
For this sixth part of the series, the exhibition The Miner’s Dream is inspired by the stories and hopes that have traversed the Grand-Hornu site.
A Cornered Solo Show #6 evokes the reverie of a miner, his contemplative dream at the top of a mountain, surrounded by his family. This daydream provides him with strength to work and feeds his desire for a peaceful, contemplative existence. This figure embodies both the endless cycle of hard labour and the vital dependence on it to ensure the survival of his family. Like Sisyphus, he exhausts himself tirelessly in a repetitive task, the exit from which seems to be constantly postponed, generating an allegory of work as a necessity, a burden and a driving force of hope.
Before his intervention at the MACS, five institutions had already hosted an installation from the series: the Grand Duke Jean Museum of Modern Art in Luxembourg (MUDAM), the National Museum of 21st Century Arts in Rome (MAXXI), the Belvedere Palace in Vienna, the National Gallery of Fine Arts in Sofia, and the Ludwig Museum in Budapest.
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Nedko Solakov was born in 1957 in Cherven Bryag, Bulgaria. Today he lives and works in Sofia.
Since the 1990s, his work has been presented at numerous prestigious artistic events like the Venice Biennale, the São Paulo Biennale and the Kassel documenta. In 2007, at the 52nd Venice Biennale, he received an ‘Honourable Mention to an artist exhibited in the central international exhibition’.