“The artist here talks about how he understands time, space, and current events. The exhibition can make the viewer feel uncomfortable, but in my opinion, this is the task of the artist - to talk about problems, about what you don’t want to talk about and don’t even want to think about sometimes,” Dastan Kozhakhmetov, the curator of the exhibition says.
"A lot of people think it's hype, but no - there's only art here. When a sculpture falls, it takes a couple of seconds. And I make a 'storyboard' of the fall, I turn a second phenomenon into a whole world. Each individual figure falls, time stretches," Yerbossyn Meldibekov shared his idea.
“I have known Yerbossyn Meldibekov for several years and have been following his work. This exhibition allows us to think very seriously about tomorrow, the space that we call Central Asia. Here are reflections on consequences of our mental problems, which we, probably, being inside the system, may not see. I invite everyone to see the exhibition. We have plans for other projects in the field of culture, in addition to this exhibition, we are already preparing a land art project in Katon-Karagay, where international masters of land art and our Kazakhstani artists will participate,” Serik Tolukpayev, the founder of AITAS Holding and philanthropist said.