Art Resilience movement

The Art Résilience movement was created in 2014 by the artist Ksenia Milicevic. The head office is at Bateau-Lavoir, Paris, France.
Concept
The Art Résilience movement was created in 2014 by Ksenia Milicevic along with other founding members, namely John Botica (New Zealand), Gregorio Cuartas (Colombia), Christel Larson (France), Gérard Lartigue (Mexico), Victor Molev (Canada), Miguel Betancourt (Ecuador), Senol Sak (Turkey) and Christopher Stone (England) in Paris, France.
It is a group of artists for whom art is not the result of a random gesture, nor a dramatic or sealed entertainment for the public. "Resilience" is used by Milicevic to refer to a term originally used in physics to characterize the ability of a material subjected to an impact to regain its original state and to still have the same identity. Resilience is, in art, the ability of the artwork to preserve its special features through aesthetics, despite increasing subjectivization. Movement Art Resilience is not of a formal nature, it seeks to redefine the notion of art.
Manifesto of the movement
*The definition of art is possible.
*Beauty is objective and the natural foundation of art.
*The formal expression must be free, but based on aesthetics that ensures quality.
*Artists must be aware and responsible for their actions.
*Art is key to community and individual development.

Exhibitions
The first International Exhibition Art Resilience was held in August 2015 at the Saint-Frajou Painting Museum, France. Artists from ten different countries participated.
 
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