Symmetry Of Everyday Life (2021)

Georgi Georgiev-Jorrras
40x40x10 cm, "Symmetry of daily routine" series – H, oil painting on oil paper, cardboard, gypsum, styrofoam EPS, white MDF box
  • Herbarium Collection - Collection - Symmetry Of Everyday Life - Georgi Georgiev-Jorrras
  • Herbarium Collection - Collection - Symmetry Of Everyday Life - Georgi Georgiev-Jorrras

“Stay a while, you are so beautiful”.
Faust today. Modern and bathed in neon. Part of a persistent, nostalgic longing for missing content and exploring the connection between spirit and matter, memory and image. Also a brief retrospective, an attempt at another study of the image. Something like moving on the edge or trying to look around and beyond. At the same time.
Also inspiration from the apparent banalities surrounding us in everyday life. This playful routine of the habit to the degree of self-absorption, self-sufficiency in the cataloging of images, signs and symbols, meanings. Self-extinguishing.
What sometimes, but only occasionally, clutches our throats to the point of not being surprised by our surroundings, a dream. A lullaby of our sharpness of perception and attention, generously promising that everything is equal and as if - a fact. The beauty and the miracle of being alive have become something banal, boring and guaranteed to us. A bit forged by sad greatness, a lot of fear and the yellow look of a crazy person - thinking, but never out loud, that it is eternity. Cement pony.
The content of the box from the "HERBARIUM" project is part of my latest series of works: "Symmetry of Everyday Life". The text, in relation to the series, is incomplete, and in particular this text will undergo changes. This is an evolving text. At the moment, however, it is entirely relevant to my work displayed in the box here.

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Georgi Georgiev-Jorrras (born in 1975 in Sofia, Bulgaria) is a visual artist working in the field of contemporary art. He earned a bachelor's degree in printmaking from the National Academy of Art in Sofia in 2003. His practice encompasses painting, drawing, object and installation art, often incorporating everyday materials to create new contexts and meanings. He explores themes such as memory, the psyche, and human presence through layering, deconstruction, and transformation of the visual surface. His works blend humor, absurdity, and personal symbolism, with each piece carrying a sense of process and ritual.
In 2006, he received the second painting prize from the St. St. Cyril and Methodius Foundation’s competition for young artists, critics, and curators. In 2004, he won the award for a young Bulgarian artist from the “Art Dialogue” association in Paris. He was nominated for the BAZA Award for contemporary art (2009), the Sofia Award for Visual Arts (2009), and the Gaudenz B. Ruf Foundation Award (2007). He lives and works in Sofia.