Calvert 22 Foundation

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Calvert 22 Foundation
Calvert 22 Foundation logo.jpg
FormationMay 2009[1]
TypeNonprofit organization think tank
HeadquartersSomerset House
London,
Director
Nonna Materkova
Websitecalvert22.org

Calvert 22 Foundation is a non-profit UK registered charity created in 2009 by Russian-born, London-based economist Nonna Materkova. Calvert 22 Foundation focuses on the contemporary culture and creativity of the 29 countries of the New East (eastern Europe, Russia, the Balkans and Central Asia) through education, events, exhibitions, research, and online content in The Calvert Journal.[2]

Mission[]

Calvert 22 Foundation's mission is to build opportunities for emerging creative talent in the New East by supporting and showcasing the contemporary culture and creative economy of the region and deepening knowledge through in-depth research and analysis.

Activities[]

The foundation's first initiative was Calvert 22 Gallery in London (since 2016 called Calvert 22 Space). The not-for-profit hosted events, talks, screenings and exhibitions on history, photography, film, music, architecture, literature and contemporary art of the region.[3] It was also the foundation's headquarters. Set across two floors on a converted warehouse, the gallery's name was derived from its address on Calvert Avenue in Shoreditch, East London, which is historically connected to immigrants from Eastern Europe.

The foundation has partnered and collaborated with other cultural institutions – Tate Modern, State Hermitage Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum, The Photographers' Gallery, the Science Museum, the British Council, the Barbican Centre, London Fashion Week, London Book Festival, the London Festival of Architecture and the London Design Festival among others.

From its early years, Calvert 22 Foundation has been working closely with top universities in the UK and internationally, including the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, University College London, and the Royal College of Art. In 2012, the foundation established a partnership with Smolny College (the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences of St Petersburg State University) to enable student and lecturer exchange programmes, visits, and conferences.

2013 saw the creation of Calvert Forum,[4] a creative industries think tank generating forums, talks and reports researching the role of creative enterprise on economic and social development in the New East region. In 2016, the Calvert 22 Foundation launched its long-term collaboration with PricewaterhouseCoopers to develop and publish the Creative Capital Index.

In May 2016, the foundation established the New East Photo Prize, for "representations of the social, cultural and physical landscape of the New East and other perspectives on that region," and presented the prize's inaugural exhibition from November to December 2016.[5]

In 2017, Calvert 22 Foundation dedicated a year-long season of events, art and digital content to marking the centenary of the Russian Revolution entitled The Future Remains: Revisiting Revolution in partnership with St Petersburg's Hermitage Museum.[6]

The New East Travel Guide is the foundation's mobile app, "that connects city travellers to the creative and cultural side of the New East". Locations currently included are Moscow, St Petersburg, Sochi, Kazan, Voronezh and Tbilisi.[7]

Calvert 22 Space[]

Calvert 22 Space

Since its opening in 2009, Calvert 22 Space staged exhibitions of over 1,500 artists and photographers from the New East. They included Sanja Iveković, Alexander Brodsky, Neue Slowenische Kunst, and Olga Chernysheva. Curators of exhibitions included David Stork, David Elliot, Kate Bush, Isaac Julian, Mark Nash, Joseph Backstein and Yara Bubnova.  

Calvert 22 Space was home to the Calvert 22 Bookshop and the Calvert 22 Café, which hosted pop-ups, supper clubs and book launches.

The photography exhibition, Close and Far, held at Calvert 22 Space was named by the Guardian as one of the 10 best photography exhibitions in the world in 2014.[8]

Calvert 22 Space closed in December 2018 moving most of its activities online. The foundation continues to hold events and exhibitions with partner institutions in the UK and internationally.

The Calvert Journal[]

In 2013, the foundation launched The Calvert Journal, a digital magazine of contemporary New East culture, including art, film, architecture, design, fashion and avant-garde culture.[9] It is updated daily with reportage, comment and photography, by an editorial team in London and a network of contributors in the New East. Initially launched with a Russian focus, The Calvert Journal has since broadened its scope to include all 29 countries in the New East region.

References[]

  1. ^ "Calvert 22 to Open in London". Blouin Artinfo. 2008-12-15. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  2. ^ "About — Calvert 22". Calvert 22. Calvert 22 Foundation. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Events — Calvert 22". Calvert 22. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Research - Calvert 22". Retrieved 20 October 2020.
  5. ^ Smyth, Seymour; Tom, Diane (1 August 2016). "Calvert 22 launch The New East Photo Prize". British Journal of Photography. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  6. ^ Shaw, Anny (21 December 2016). "London foundation Calvert 22 partners with Hermitage to mark 100th anniversary of Russian Revolution". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  7. ^ "New East Travel Guide". The Calvert Journal. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
  8. ^ "Top 10 photography exhibitions of 2014". The Guardian.
  9. ^ "About — The Calvert Journal". The Calvert Journal. Retrieved 15 March 2017.

External links[]

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