Andrei Noda: Images of man

The existential condition of man is underlying theme in all the work of
Andrei Noda. The canvases of Noda portray solitary figures in an alien
landscape, and quite often, two human figures are depicted as sharing
the condition of being abandoned in a strange world. In their fundamental
solitude, Noda’s personages resemble the graceful iconic figures of
Giacometti.

Like Giacometti, Andrei Noda pursues the creation of a basic image, an
elementary expression of
Dasein of man. Given this iconic dimension in
Noda’s work, it is not surprising that he feels affinity to the tradition of
Russian religious art. Likewise, he has always been impressed by the
power of expression inherent in the simplicity and symbolism of the early
Flemish masters. In their powerful plainness, Noda’s personages bear
resemblance to those of van Eyck, and in a manner resembling that of
the early Flemish masters, they are frequently depicted against the
background of an alien and bizarre landscape.

The stylized and simple images of the Russian icons or van Eyck’s
paintings seek to explain us the mystery of the existence of man in a
world that, in essence, is sacred and pervaded with God’s mercy. Noda’s
iconography is, however, that of a profane world, a landscape where
humans go on with their existence without a resort to God’s guidance,
without the omnipresence of the divine providing the world order and
significance.

Whereas the Giacomettian figures seem solemn and mournful, Noda’s
personages seem, however, to accept the fact of existence in a rather
more jovial manner. To Noda, the human condition is more akin to a
comedy than a tragedy. Despite the solitude of his personages, his
pictures are often delightfully funny, and Noda frequently accentuates the
comical aspects of the human condition with bold and surprising choices
of colour. After all, existence is not a matter of mourning, but the
absurdity of human condition is instead to be treated with warm humour
and ironic self-reflection.

A basic question that Noda seems to pose is whether there can be a
genuine way out of this comedy of human condition? Does the act of
artistic creation provide order and meaning to existence? Time and again,
the attention of the personages of Noda’s pictures seem to be fixed,
alternatively, on two symbolic objects: the cup and the flower. The
carnival and the act of artistic creation are presented as the two
alternative means of coping with the fact of being cast into an alien
landscape, of making bearable the fact of being. Does this mean that
artistic creation should, at the end of the day, be understood merely as
an expression of
mauvais foi, much akin to intoxication and the carnivalist
illusion of the world turned upside down? Is the enterprise of painting
images just another act in the comedy? Perhaps not, suggests Noda, but
if the painting of images is to become a source of order and meaning,
commitment is required of the artist – the commitment of a serious
craftsman who has the persistence to pursue his vocation, free of
pretension and sentiments of self-pity, and uninfluenced by the artistic
fads and fashions that come and go.

Andrei Noda studied painting in the Almaty Academy of Visual Arts. In the
young years, he was a gifted wrestler, and was training to participate in
the Olympic team of the Soviet Union. After graduation, the young artist
lived for years in steppe towns, painting and working as an art teacher.
Without doubt, the stark landscape of the steppe has profoundly shaped
his style: in the vast open space, one has a tendency to develop a sense
for the essential. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union fell apart, leaving its
citizens – quite akin to Noda’s personages – to cope on their own in a
new and alien world.

The post-Soviet society permitted, however, a full freedom of expression
for the new wave of visual artists. Andrei Noda’s work reached quickly
wide recognition in his native Kazakhstan, and several of his pictures
have their place in the permanent collection of the National Museum of
Modern Art in Almaty. His works have been exhibited widely both in
Europe and America, and they have been acquired in private collections
all over the world. After a period of living and working in Portland,
Oregon, he returned to his native country, settling down in a mountain
village near Almaty. In his mountain atelier, he continues to be productive
as ever, in the manner of an honest and uncompromising craftsman
pursuing the true image of man – the image that would unveil the bare
facts of being, nothing less and nothing more.

To see the works of Andrei Noda at Galerie Eurasia, please
click here.