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Russian Contemporary Art


Sergei Shutov - Ñåðãåè Øóòîâ

Sergei Shutov, Abacus Sergei Shutov, Abacus Sergey Shutov, Abacus

Shutov, 'Abacus' Installation in the Russian Pavllion, Venice Biennalle 49, 2001. photos©xlgallery

Sergei Shutov was one of the artists chosen in 2001 to represent Russia at the Venice Biennale of contemporary art. He usually works with video and mixed media. At the Biennale, he made an impressive installation in the Russian Pavilion, 'Abacus'. It constituted of 40 automated, praying figures, all dressed in the same black robes. They were kneeling, bowing to the ground and reciting prayers from different religions and in different languages. As they were reciting, the texts they were saying was shown on television screens in the corners of the room.


Alexander Brener - Àëåêñàíäð Áðåíåð

Alexander Brener performance Alexander Brener performance Alexander Brener performance / Russian contemporary art

Brener, Date, Performance on Pushkin square, Moscow, 1994. photo©Artinfo

Brener, the First Glove, Performance on Red Square, Moscow, 1995. photo©Artinfo Brener, A Man in a Lather, Action at Moscow Cont. Art Centre, 1994. photo©Artinfo

Brener is against the market of contemporary art. For him, the most important is to act. 'One shouldn't only write poems, they should be shouted'.
In his first actions, he enforced himself to show the inability of contemporary artists.
For example he met with his wife on a winter frosty day on the busy Pushkin square and they tried to make love together in public. But he shouted 'it doesn't work! Nothing works for contemporary artists! only for Jeff Koons and Chichulina...'
He went to Pushkin's museum of Fine Arts in Moscow and shited in front of Van Gogh paintings -- to show how impressed he was. He was ruining conferences. He once went half naked in winter in front of the Kremlin and called Eltsin to fight.
And it was him who, in January 1997, while visiting Stadejlik museum in Amsterdam, graffitied with a green paintball spray, a dollar sign "$" on Malevich's painting 'Suprematism'. A big green dollar sign on a white cross on a white background. Malevich's painting, for Brener, was a symbol of art business and all the people involved in it: critics, museums, art collectors, gallerists and artists themselves.

He hates authority, power of money and sees museums like 'the bastion of cultural power'. He expressed his ideas through the $ graffiti and spent years in a Dutch prison because of that.There he wrote the book 'obosani pistolet' where he tells his beliefs and summarizes all his actions.He talks about democratic art. He dreams that people would go on the streets and protest in silence or in laughter against the 'criminal power' that governs.

Alexander Brener -- a dollar sign on Malevich's picture He believes one should express one's beliefs by 'simple, funny, fast, clean hearted, naive actions'. He imagines 'a mass of people gathering on the Red Square and silently picking their nose, then the fat, boring government would shake and fall'. He was born in 1957 in Kazakstan, he hated school, liked to lie under the sun, and to make love in weird places like in a library, on a bench in a park...

In 1978 he studied philology in St Petersburg, got married then emigrated to Israel in 1981. He started making some actions there with his wife-For example once they hanged big yellow banners, with black digits painted on them, in the main street of Tel-Aviv on Shabbat's day. It reminded a bit of the yellow numbers on the uniform of concentration camps prisoners. It was hanged down by the police. Brener says he 'fucked' the police in every country where he was.
In 1992, he came to live in Moscow. He fast became a conspicuous artist in the little circle of Moscow contemporary art. He was coming to poetic lectures and was reading about sexual illnesses. He found artists were too worried by carrier and money.
For him art is like an orgasm, an ejaculation of energy, an amazing ritual.
The last thing he was up to - setting a revolution in Mexico.


Oleg Kulik - Îëåã Êóëèê

Oleg Kulik / Russian contermporary art Oleg Kulik peforming as a dog Oleg Kulik / Russian contermporary art

Kulik, Eclipse, 1994,
photo©artist from Artinfo

Kulik, Reservoir dog,Performance, 30 march 1995, photo©Artinfo Kulik, from series Rural Russia, 1994,
photo©artist from Artinfo

Kulik used to go in public places in Moscow and act like a dog. For example he would stand in front of a big shop, naked, and bark so much that it would prevent people from getting in. The performances were filmed, and always ended by the police taking him away. Often the people watching the crazy artist would play his game and treat him like a dog, but he would never let himself be stroked. So it gave a very absurd and violent representation of communication. Once he stayed for some weeks in a wooden box in a gallery, acting like a dog in a cage. A kind of modern response to Joseph Beys, who stayed in a gallery locked in for the time of the exhibition with a coyote
Kulik also milked a real dog in Rijina gallery.
He wrote : "I am an artist possessing a powerful projectional will. My projects are just as interesting as they are dangerous or repugnant to society. When I am able to materialize the phantoms of my imagination through my knowledge of the mechanisms of reality, I experience supreme bliss which I try to share with my admirers and connoisseurs."
Nowadays you will probably not encounter him any more behaving like an enraged dog while walking on the Red square, he seems to have gotten tired of it now that he is very famous and exhibited last summer in The Biennale of Venice. Now, he makes big paintings of jungle animals, maybe they sell better than his disturbing performances...


AES Group - AEC

AES Group, Muslim project AES Group / Body Space project AES Group / Family Portrait AES Group - Family portrait
AES, Muslim project, photo© from Guelman Gallery AES, Outlets. From the project "Body Space", 1995, Coloured photo, wood, gauze photo©artinfo AES, Family portrait in the interior, 1995,
photo© artists from artinfo

AES is a group of three artists: two men and one woman.
They make photos and installations. In the same style as the above 'Family portrait in the interior', where the artists open their throats to pose as much from the inside as from the outside for the portrait..some of their other photos show businessmen litterarily holding their guts in front of them in their hands.
In some art fairs their stand was exactly like a travel agency stand, with huge posters of the main sights in different capital cities. Except that in every picture a muslim element was integrated, like here above, the statue of Liberty is wearing a veil. An other photo shows a view of Paris with the Eiffel Tower at the foreground and at the background Mosques and Taj Mahal-like buildings growing like mushrooms. It's called the 'muslim project'. A view of the future ?
In 2000 they exhibited a round red wooden arena, in different museums around the world. Inside the arena were ten large photos of girls. All of them were teenagers, from Russia, all dressed with a football tee-shirt. At the entrance of the arena was a board where was written that half of those girls are actually emprisonned for crime of murder. The game is to fill in a paper and to choose among the ten girls which ones are the criminals. Their crimes are explained in detail, for example one of those girls killed her step-father with a kitchen knive. After playing the weird game of denouncing who must be the criminals, only by examining the face of the ten girls, the spectators were invited to leave a donation for the criminal girls. But never the answer of whom is who was told.

Check out their website at http://www.aes-group.org it's nice.


Avdey Ter-Oganyan

Avdey Ter-Oganyan - Some problems of restoring contermporary works of art Avdey Ter-Oganyan - Marilyn Avdey Ter-Oganyan - Campbell Soup
Ter-Oganyan, 'Some Problems of Restoring Contemporary Works of Art', 1993, Porcelain, glue, cement © artist from Artinfo Ter-Oganyan, Andy Wharol,'Marilyn'' and 'Campbell Soup'
from series 'Pictures for the museum', 1989, oil on canvas©artist from Artinfo

Ter-Oganian's first art works were parodies of Duchamp, for example he exhibited a men's urinal, where the visitors where actually invited to piss inside. In autumn 1994, he climbed the US Embassy and hanged a parody of Jasper John's USA Flag painting instead of the real flag. He didn't like the market of art and tried to make things that wouldn't sell.
And he was against taboos. One day there was a big contemporary art fair in Manezh gallery in Moscow. All the galleries had stands where they were showing their favorite artists and selling their stuff. He installed a stand also, were he also had a lot of images: cheap Russian reproductions of Orthodox icons that are sold in the streets for a few Rubbles. He stood at his stand and proposed people to buy an icon and to break it, or to buy an icon and to have it broken by the artist.There was a lot of polemic about this action and Ter-Oganian was sued, now he left Russia. You can read some articles about him on Tv Gallery website.


Oleg Mavromati

Oleg Marvomati - Citizen X Oleg Marvomatti - Citizen X performance
Mavromati,recto and verso of the invitation to his performance 'Citizen X' on 22 september 2001 at Guelman Gallery, Moscow.

He crucified himself on an X cross in Marat Guelman's gallery in Moscow, at 18.00 pm on 22nd September 2001, and he does it often. When a journalist asked him why, he said: "what can I do if that's the only way how an artist now can get attention on his work.."He also speaks about revolution. On the day of his performance,there was a 2 meter high wooden X cross in the Gallery, like the cross on the flyer. Oleg enters the room wearing cut jeans, bare torso, a strong and big man, full of life. His legs have wounds of previous performances. The room is becoming full with people, art critics, journalists, artists, students...
Oleg moves back against the cross and a guy steps from the crowd with a large roll of adhesive tape in the hand and starts to tie him up to the cross, first scotching his stomach to the middle of the X. Between the violent tearing sounds of the tape Oleg says :" I made this performance in Hungary, now it is the continuation". And while they are attaching his open arms and legs to the branches of the X cross, he keeps on talking.
Once he's well festened, he calls another man in, who walks out of the crowd a hammer and nails in his hand. The public steps forward to see better, everybody is talking, or commenting, it's very noisy : "he makes this performance often, he has piercings in the hands and feet..." I try to see the piercings in his hands but i don't manage, they look plain.
The scotcher unscotches Oleg's right hand and the piercer starts to nail it to the wooden cross. The sound of the hammer makes the whole situation suddenly feel very real.
I'm realizing that this performer will be crucified in front of us, I feel it's a bit crazy.
Oleg shouts as a drop of blood rolls along his arm. Then his second hand is nailed, and his both feet. They unscotch him completely and he's only holding there against the cross with the nails. His breathing is loud. I wish there would be silence, but the crowd is ever so noisy, doesn't stop commenting, talking, moving.. I'm hurting for him, I wonder why he does this, why we are letting him do it.
He says : " You see what contemporary artists have to do nowadays ? " And he moans because of the pain he must feel : " You see what the public is waiting for ? " Everybody stares, some people take pictures, videos.
It seems like an eternity before Oleg Mavromati calls the guys to unnail him. More blood leeks from his hands. The scene is like a live biblical 'descent of the cross'. It reminds of all those paintings showing the people holding the body of the dead Christ, the feeling of compassion. The performer is accompanied to a small back room by the guys who attached, nailed and detached him. Drops of blood trace his path..
Many people leave. In the gallery a girl is using the back of the flyers to take prints of the drops of blood on the floor, then she's installing them on one corner of the room.
The ritual seems to continue also in the back room, I peep in and see Oleg Mavromati lying on the floor. A girl dressed in black is cleaning the blood from his legs with a wet cloth. She applies it on him, rinses then rings it out, and applies it on him again. His body is strong opposed to his hands and feet which look so fragile and bloody now. Another person rolls a white cloth around the wounded limbs, covering the stigmas.
His art has such an impact on his personal life. He'll feel the pain from the crucifixion for long. Some journalists come in and take an interview. They talk with him about art as a way of initiating revolutions in how people see things.
I feel he shows in a very powerful way how life can be violent, how one can be crazy to the point of hurting oneself sometimes. I ask him if he likes doing this and he says " Yes, I like it, that's why I do it, but don't think I'm a masochist in my private life ".
And the installation continues: someone put some fresh raisins in the middle of the cross.



Lyudmila Gorlova

Lyudmila Gorlova = How Do I Love Lyudmila Gorlova - How do I love Lyudmila Gorlova - How do I love  
Gorlova, from the series 'how do I love' 1997. photo©XL Gallery    

Her 10 meter long photo series 'how do I love' shows her roaming in her flat in every position: lying on her bed, sitting on the floor of the kitchen, cutting her hair very short, wearing too much lipstick in the bath, cleaning the walls. One sentence is associated to each picture, for example on one photo where she's wearing a mud mask, she wrote 'I'm feeling silly'. She also made videos of weddings. You can also see her work at www.xlgallery.com.


Researched and written by Celine Smith from The Solvents Live Art collective.


 

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