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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Bart de Baere , Ilya Kabakov , Emilia Kabakov , Boris GroysPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Zed Books Ltd Weight: 0.714kg ISBN: 9781786993243ISBN 10: 1786993244 Pages: 536 Publication Date: 05 October 2017 Audience: College/higher education , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsForeword – Bart De Baere Acknowledgments – Elena Zaytseva and Alex Anikina Introduction – Elena Zaytseva Part One - Past futures 1.The nomadic theater of the communist - Keti Chukhrov 2.The center of cosmic energy - Ilya and Emilia Kabakov 3.The truth of art - Boris Groys 4.VDNKh, the capital of the world - Andrey Monastyrsky 5.The Communist Revolution was caused by the Sun - Anton Vidokle Part Two - Inherited aesthetics 6.History of angels - Joseph Backstein 7.Concerning abstractionism - Dmitry Gutov and Anatoly Osmolovsky 8. Screens - Olga Chernysheva 9.Two manifestos - Dmitry Prigov 10.The form of art as mediation - Maria Chehonadskih 11.Soviet communism and the paradox of alienation - Artemy Magun 12.The Russian avant-garde as an uncontrollable beast- Alexander Brener Part Three - From the archive 13. Author, cosmos, archive - Vadim Zakharov 14. A binary system - Bogdan Mamonov 15. You can call him another man - Maria Kapajeva 16. Running to the nest - Andrey Kuzkin 17. Brink, kerbside, fence, margin - Masha Sumnina Part Four - Russia, today 18.A heritage without an heir - Ilya Budraitskis 19.Krisis - Dmitry Venkov 20.Questions without answers, answers without questions - Gleb Napreenko 21.The Utopian Union of the Unemployed - Gluklya (Natalia Pershina-Yakimanskaya) 22.Chto Delat? and method - Dmitry Vilensky 23.Weakness - Yevgeny Granilshchikov Part Five - Future futures 24.Ultra black - Oxana Timofeeva 25.Demand full automation of contemporary art - Arseny Zhilyaev 26.The Antichthon - Alex Anikina 27.I want to be afraid of the forest - Ivan Novikov 28.The skyscraper-cleaner pine marten - Pavel Pepperstein About the contributors Text credits Image credits IndexReviews`With contributions from an impressive list of artists, curators, theorists and historians, this book offers an incredible insight into not only contemporary writing on Russian art but writing as art in Russia.' Adrian George, writer and international curator, and author of The Curator's Handbook `Theory and practice are brought together with clarity and conviction in this powerful selection of aesthetic statements.' John Bowlt, Director, Institute of Modern Russian Culture `Zaytseva and Anikina's comprehensive anthology illuminates the constellation of Russian art across realism and fantasy, Communism and Cosmism, orthodoxy and perpetual revolution.' Gilda Williams, author of How to Write about Contemporary Art `Cosmism is the lure, when a revived mysticism is the order of the day. But this collection is more energetically eclectic than that. It provides a window into three generations of artists and critics - Soviet, Post-Soviet, and today.' Peter Osborne, author of Anywhere or Not at All: Philosophy of Contemporary Art `Fascinating! More proof of the continued vibrancy of Russian art: modern, postmodern or cosmic, despite the fringe ideas increasingly becoming mainstream.' Alena Ledeneva, Director, UCL FRINGE Centre `With contributions from an impressive list of artists, curators, theorists and historians, this book offers an incredible insight into not only contemporary writing on Russian art but writing as art in Russia.' Adrian George, writer and international curator, and author of The Curator's Handbook `Fascinating ... packed with original essays, projects and even conceptual fiction.' TLS Book of the Year 2017With contributions from an impressive list of artists, curators, theorists and historians, this book offers an incredible insight into not only contemporary writing on Russian art but writing as art in Russia.' Adrian George, previously curator at Tate, and author of The Curator's Handbook `Theory and practice are brought together with clarity and conviction in this powerful selection of aesthetic statements.' John Bowlt, Director, Institute of Modern Russian Culture `Zaytseva and Anikina's comprehensive anthology illuminates the constellation of Russian art across realism and fantasy, Communism and Cosmism, orthodoxy and perpetual revolution.' Gilda Williams, author of How to Write about Contemporary Art `Cosmism is the lure, when a revived mysticism is the order of the day. But this collection is more energetically eclectic than that. It provides a window into three generations of artists and critics - Soviet, Post-Soviet, and today.' Peter Osborne, author of Anywhere or Not at All: Philosophy of Contemporary Art `Fascinating! More proof of the continued vibrancy of Russian art: modern, postmodern or cosmic, despite the fringe ideas increasingly becoming mainstream.' Alena Ledeneva, Director, UCL FRINGE Centre `Long overdue, this anthology is the first to reveal the idiosyncratic and singular perspectives of leading contemporary artists from Russia. Together, the texts offer a portrait of creative resistance from what Bart de Baere calls the virtually invisible center of the world .' Kate Fowle, Chief Curator, Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow `A fascinating collection of essays, full of stimulating paradoxes, which perfectly reflects the intensity of debate on the contemporary Russian art scene, as precarious in everyday life as it is majestic in its cosmic dreams.' Ekaterina Degot, Alexander Rodchenko School of Photography and New Media, Moscow `An excellent initiative to shed light in the English speaking world on Russian writing about and by contemporary artists. It will help give them a broader audience and spark important cross-cultural debate.' Andrew Jack, journalist for the Financial Times Author InformationIlya and Emilia Kabakov, Russian-born, US-based conceptual artists known for their pioneering large-scale environments and installations. Andrey Monastyrsky, who along with Illya Kabakov, pioneered the Moscow Conceptualism movement. Boris Groys, art critic, media theorist, and philosopher. Bart De Baere, Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp. Pavel Pepperstein, prominent author, painter and film maker. Dmitri Prigov, famous dissident writer and artist who died in 2007. Anton Vidokle, founder of e-flux. Arseny Zhilyaev, artist and author. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |