Poster made for the exhibition: NON-ALIGNED / RE-ALIGNED Photograph courtesy of another vacant space, 2012 |
Installation view of artist Vladimir Semenov’s Archive of Leningrad Conceptual Art another vacant space Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012 |
In an article dating from 2008, the curators presented the questions:
"How do you excavate an 'alternative' past, one which historians have not yet brought into existence, one which is 'hidden' from view by influential gatekeepers, 'lost' in far-flung provinces far from the public eye? How can one 'revisit' history? "The exhibition NON-ALIGNED / RE-ALIGNED in Berlin is a continuation of the extensive research that the curators have put into the Perestroika movement and are continuing the process now, still discovering work never before seen by the public. During this period of Soviet history, many artists were restricted by the government, however as is the case with most periods of repression, a rich cultural energy was released onto the scene. The scene however, as with most historically important movements, was mostly underground.
Archive from the performance group “Seminar” of art actions carried out between 1986 and 1988 Photograph courtesy of another vacant space, 2012 |
In the case of Russia, [Leningrad Conceptualism] and the [contemporary concept of "Street Art Assembly"] represent examples of the shift from what we call the "non-aligned", apolitical, anti-ideological generation of the late 80s to the re-aligned, highly politicised moment we are experiencing now (vid. Chto Delat, Pussy Riot, Voina).
In the contemporary political turmoil in Russia, we are continuing this [research and exhibitions] with the current RE-ALIGNED thematic project. Following the Another Vacant Space show, we are planning a sizable conference (see the discussion paper on our website www.PerpetualMobile.org) which will lead up to our museum-scale exhibition at Tromso Art Hall in Norway. We hope to make that full-scale show travel and grow.Also included in the exhibition amongst the paper documents was a screening of Yuris Lesnik, Vladislav Mamyshev “Monroe” and Timur Novikov’s pirate t.v. reporting from the Leningrad-St. Petersburg art scene in the early 1990s. New Yorkers who were around in the late 1970s might be familiar with the infamous No Wave movement and TV Party that was on public access television and the brain-child of Glenn O'Brian. T.V. Party featured many well known artists of the time including Andy Warhol and Basquiat. The pirate t.v. from the Leningrad era was similar in vain, a combination of reportage and interviews with artists of the time, also featuring avant-garde performance based projects.
Installation view from NON- ALIGNED / RE-ALIGNEDFilm projection directly onto the wall Photograph courtesy of another vacant space, 2012 |
At a time when the plight of the performance group Pussy Riot has brought much attention to contemporary Russia, its issues, politics, and religion (according to Stodolsky is Re-aligned) it is also relevant to look back to the artists who came before them, artists who unable to document most of their work due to the political climate and instead made oddly beautiful and extensive paper archives. Stay tuned to The Arts Assembly project, holding conferences in several countries including, Latvia, Norway, France, Finland, China and the list is growing.
More soon!
another vacant spaceU8 Pankstrasse, S-Bahn Bornholmerstrasse, Tram M23 Osloer Str./Prinzenallee
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