Olga Volchkova

Olga Volchkova

Olga Volchkova

Olga Volchkova on the cover of the album American Twilight
Website olgalaxy.com

Olga Volchkova is a Russian-born artist currently resident in Eugene, Oregon.[1][2]

Volchkova was born in Tver, Russia, in 1970, in the former Soviet Union. Much of her family were collectivized subsistence farmers living in villages outside of the city.[3] In Tver she studied chemistry, music, and art, and took degrees in art restoration and icon painting. The Grabar Institute certified her as a second-degree Oil Painting restorer.[4][5] She worked as a conservator and curator in the Tver Oblast Art Gallery, and joined a journeyman team of important early post-Soviet iconostasis restorers.[6]

In 1998, she moved to the United States, where she worked as an all-around art restorer in Manhattan. In 1999, she moved to downtown Palo Alto, California, where she found herself in the heart of the first Dotcom boom. She became artistic director for Workspot, a now defunct start-up and contracting house near University Avenue in Palo Alto. There she pioneered the commercial use of scanned watercolors in webpage design, a laborious approach that won her no imitators, but many admirers—Workspot took the 2000 Linux Journal award for Best Web Solution. [7][8]

In 2000 she moved to Eugene, Oregon. She studied ceramics and figure sculpture at the University of Oregon, and her work became a small sensation in Eugene's wood-fired ceramics movement.[9][10] She became involved in concluding work in a research project initiated by architect Christopher Alexander.[11] In 2002 she began to study at the world-renowned Pilchuck Glass School, where she discovered cast glass. One of her first pieces was selected as the only cast glass work for Pilchuck's live auction, Passion Afire, of emerging glass artists, held at the Experience Music Project in Seattle. Within a year, Pilchuck also selected her work for their annual live auction, in the company of some of the world's most famous glass artists.[12][13]

In 2003, she co-founded a non-profit dance institute, The Tango Center,[14] and became its art director. She managed the hall's interior design and construction, but also sang Russian Tangos with the house band, and performed Argentine Tango, the dance, with various partners in front of live audiences. She continues to pursue cast glass, painting, public art, photography, and social dance.[15][16][17]

In 2013 she appeared on the cover of Crime & the City Solution's album American Twilight. She also played the central figure in music videos released by Mute Records for the album,[18][19] created by Danielle de Picciotto.

Her latest major series of paintings, original icons known as 'The Garden Saints',[20] were part of two Art exhibitions in Berlin, and two in Hamburg, in 2012 and 2013.[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31] These are based on her experience as a gardener, landscape designer, and farmer, and inspired by research on the history of human-plant interaction. An expansion of this series is exhibiting from 2015 to 2016 at the University of Oregon's Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art.[32][33][34][35][36][37]

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