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                Chehov's Festival, Elverket, Drama Theater, Stockholm;
  
 Concept: This particular performance and installation are parts of my larger  project. Realised in 2006-07, it investigates a phenomenon of femenine memory,  visualised through the form of small knot. Personal exhibition at  "Belka&Strelka" gallery (St.Petersburg, Nov.2006) successfully  started this project. Then it was continued in the Art Museum of Yaroslavl  and during the Workshops of Art Moscow.              
                
 
               
               In my view, the knot is a very peculiar form, showing the unity of  memory and meaning, and rooted in our culture as a special practice. I remember  my grand-grandmother: illiterate, she used knotting as a means to document and,  at the same time, to structure and study her life, like a kind of a diary,  organiser and even a simple calculator. The entire day of the exhibition opening, I am patiently doing a variety  of knots, using boiled noodles to create an abstract "picture",  reminding in its monochromatic rhythmic structure a kind of writing. These  constellations of meaning-knots weave a unity of "now-here" and the past,  of living and reflection, of female paranoia and a means to get through it -  all this arise before the viewers, who can also join my labours.
  This performance works with my personal history, and important event to  be mentioned is participation in a Venice Biennale (2005). It is not  accidentally that noodles became a material of choice for knotting. My woman's  memory of Italy  is directly linked to noodles. To knot noodles thus is to work with this  important and equally painful experience.
 At the same time, this project remains critical to the existing system  of contemporary art. "To noodle someone" is a common Russian idiom,  meaning "to string someone along", so this performance is derisive  and self-ironic.
  Project  description: Three long black cardboard  strips, 1 meter  wide, hang on the three walls of the exposition box. Two plastic strings  stretched in the middle of every strip 30 cm apart each other.
 
 There is an electrical oven in the middle of the box.  Noodles are being cooked in a huge bowl. Artist starts the performance 1-2  hours beforehand the exhibition opening, so that about a quarter of the space  is covered with knotted noodles when first visitors arrive. Noodles change  their appearance with time: white and supple while being hanged, they grow yellower  and thinner, reminding strings. These metamorphosis are also part of the visual  component of the project.
               
                             
                  
 Press: "Noodles squared" (S.Khachaturov, News Time,  28; 16 February 2007)…among those (applications for the "Art-Moscow  Workshops" - L.M.) one is memorable, though. It is a project by Liza  Morozova, member of ESCAPE group. This work is an explicitly vernacular  interpretation of subjects such as gender and femenism. The thing is, Liza is  to create an abstract canvas by knotting the traditional russian noodles.  Macaroni meaning-knots constellations become a silent evidence of various  cultural meanings, illustrating not leastly the difficult lot of a woman (such  labour is hell hard!) Liza's project is also charming for its honest utterance:  contemporary art, denying its inability or reluctance to speak of life audibly  and interestingly, often becomes a practice of elegant "noodling" the  audience (Russian idiom "to noodle someone", meaning "to string  along" - L.M.)
  
 
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