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Russian Drone Painting 7 (Carousel at Pripyat, 2016)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 1 (Mir)
       
     
Studio Shot: “Mir” and “Damascus”
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 4 (Hovrinskaya Hospital)"
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 2 (Ghost Town, Caucasus)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 3 (Damascus)
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 9 (Norinsk, 2019)"
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 5  (USSR Air Museum)
       
     
Studio Shot: Ghost Town (Caucacus) and Damascus, 2015
       
     
Studio Shot: Hospital and Pripyat
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 5 (Lantau Peak, Hong Kong)"
       
     
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VIDEO: "LAWRENCE GIPE : RUSSIAN DRONE PAINTINGS"

by Eric Minh Swenson

20230116_123745.jpg
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 7 (Carousel at Pripyat, 2016)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 7 (Carousel at Pripyat, 2016)

2021

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

Russian Drone Painting 1 (Mir)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 1 (Mir)

2018-20

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

Russian Drone Painting 1 is a depiction of the Mir Diamond Mine, which is the largest hole in the world. It was exhausted 10 years ago, and the remnants of a town that housed 6000 now lays abandoned around it.

Studio Shot: “Mir” and “Damascus”
       
     
Studio Shot: “Mir” and “Damascus”

Studio Shot: “Mir” and “Damascus”

oil on canvas, 72” x 96”each

"Russian Drone Painting 4 (Hovrinskaya Hospital)"
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 4 (Hovrinskaya Hospital)"

2019-2020

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

As a startling symbol of wasted resources and urban decay, the Hovrinskaya Hospital ranks high, shown here from a drone suspended above it just prior to its demolition (it is currently an enormous vacant lot for sale by the city). Begun in 1980, its funding was pulled when it was 90% finished in 1985. And so it remained for 34 years, a brooding hulk subsumed by forest overlooking a Moscow suburb; it became a mystical destination for some urban explorers, fantasized to be “haunted” by the outlying community, and the site of two murders and a suicide.

Russian Drone Painting 2 (Ghost Town, Caucasus)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 2 (Ghost Town, Caucasus)

2018-20

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

Re-discovered in 2018, this century-old ruin had faded into obscurity until a RUPTLY drone buzzed over, looking for likely havens for terrorists.

Russian Drone Painting 3 (Damascus)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 3 (Damascus)

Russian Drone Painting 3 (Damascus)

2018-9

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

Without knowledge of the title, Russian Drone Painting 2 (Damascus) has the anonymous quality of any city besieged. It is in fact from drone footage of a bombardment of Damascus by Russia in 2015. Here the dystopian landscape melds with the technological and political reality of the day. To paraphrase historian Molly Enholm (in her review of Constance Mallinson’s work), Humanity’s desire for self-destruction, of its own history and people, is “unyielding in its monstrous appetite as Goya’s Saturn Devouring his Children, while suggesting a conclusion similar to the great Titan’s fate.”

"Russian Drone Painting 9 (Norinsk, 2019)"
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 9 (Norinsk, 2019)"

2021

oil on canvas

36” x 48”

Russian Drone Painting 9 (Norinsk) originates from RUPTLY footage taken in2019 of the Russian city of Norinsk. Known as one of the most polluted cities in the world, it plays host to toxic nickel mining. Birth defects are rampant amongst the population.

Russian Drone Painting 5  (USSR Air Museum)
       
     
Russian Drone Painting 5 (USSR Air Museum)

Russian Drone Painting 5 (USSR Air Museum)

2019-20

oil on canvas

72x96” in progress

Studio Shot: Ghost Town (Caucacus) and Damascus, 2015
       
     
Studio Shot: Ghost Town (Caucacus) and Damascus, 2015
Studio Shot: Hospital and Pripyat
       
     
Studio Shot: Hospital and Pripyat
"Russian Drone Painting 5 (Lantau Peak, Hong Kong)"
       
     
"Russian Drone Painting 5 (Lantau Peak, Hong Kong)"

2019-2020

oil on canvas

72” x 96”

My latest work, Russian Drone Paintings, is based on stills from a live video feed called RUPTLY. This unique online channel, run by the Russian government, posts aerial videos taken by fleets of drones that multi-task for news programs and surveillance. Each painting consists of a frozen frame from this feed, and the subjects include scenes of abandoned mines in Siberia, ghost towns that seem to be dissolving into remote mountains, bombardments of territory, and other active and/or residual evidence of humanity’s relentless intervention into Nature.

Russian Drone Painting 5 (Lantau Peak) originates from RUPTLY footage taken in December 2019 of pro-Democracy activists camping far above Hong Kong. Here, from a vantage point in the landscape genre usually reserved for the proprietary gaze, a small band takes its final stand silhouetted against a toxic sunset. My intention is to undermine the expectations of the genre, while employing all of the technical devices of traditional epic landscape painting. In the end, “Lantau Peak” is act of commemoration, both for the cause of the subjects and the environment behind them.