The Guardian describes
Boris Savelev's work as elegant observational realism, while the 78-year-old photographer himself attributes his aesthetic to a meticulous, almost scientific approach to light and form — the perspective that classifies him as a follower of pictorialism. Speaking with this master of layered shadows, one encounters a peculiar connection: Savelev’s answers are as succinct and precise as the quality of his prints he achieves in tandem with Adam Lowe, director of
Factum Arte and founder of
Factum Foundation — the organizations bringing together cutting-edge digital technologies, art, and high quality conservation culture.
Yet, as Savelev’s reflections reveal, limitations and search for precision could be indispensable components of one’s success. In his case, it is his keen eye for detail, a sense of mathematically calculated beauty (perhaps also due to his major in aeronautical engineering), and tireless experimentation with printing methods that have earned him international recognition. Today Savelev’s works are exhibited worldwide and held in prestigious collections of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, the Saarland Museum in Saarbrucken, the Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe, The Art Institute of Chicago, and many other major institutions and private collections.
Admiring Savelev’s six-decade-long career, FORM Magazine distracts him from his printing work at the laboratory, where—his technical search supported by Adam Lowe and Factum Arte team—Boris continues pushing the boundaries of multi-layered pigment printing on gesso-coated aluminum.