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- <text id=89TT0984>
- <link 91TT0571>
- <title>
- Apr. 10, 1989: Canvases Of Their Own
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 10, 1989 The New USSR
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 116
- CANVASES OF THEIR OWN
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Now that socialist realism has been undone, artists struggle
- between the desire to find a fresh vision and the lure of
- Western markets
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hughes/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> If any single art event symbolized Russia's thawed
- relations to its own modernist past, it was the show at the
- Tretyakov Art Gallery in Moscow last winter by a painter and
- mystic who died in 1935, well into the Stalin era, and whose
- work remained buried for decades thereafter: Kasimir Malevich.
- </p>
- <p> Each day a long queue of the curious would form. Inside the
- packed gallery, people would argue and gesticulate in front of
- abstract paintings--a red square on a white ground, a
- fragmented cubist portrait--done a generation before their
- birth.
- </p>
- <p> The Malevich show was a political emblem--an embrace of
- a severed history. Not long before, in A-Ya, a magazine
- dedicated to "unofficial" Russian art, the critic Igor
- Golomshtok lamented, "We know little more about Malevich's last
- paintings than about Andrei Rublev," the legendary Russian
- artist who died in the 15th century. For most artists in the
- Soviet Union today, Malevich is the rodonachalnik, the "founding
- father" of modern art: the man around whom its history needs to
- be rewritten.
- </p>
- <p> Born in Kiev in 1878, Malevich invented himself with
- astonishing speed. Between 1905, the year he moved to Moscow,
- and 1915, he ran through the gamut of early modernist styles,
- from pointillism to cubism. Early works like Floor Polishers,
- 1911-12, show his assimilative powers: this gripping image of
- hard labor, where every line reinforces the muscular twist of
- bodies and the thrust of the feet with their waxing pads on the
- floor, ultimately derives from Matisse's Dance. Troglodytic,
- pious and massive, Malevich's figures of peasants from the '20s
- both assert modernity and deny it.
- </p>
- <p> His most radical paintings were the suprematist
- compositions he made between 1913 and the mid-1920s. To imagine
- that these were just formal exercises is to underrate them.
- Malevich thought of his black square and its cousins--the
- white-on-white geometries, the crisp arrangements of colored
- planes floating in space as deep as the sky--as icons, points
- of entry into a superior spiritual world. Their vividness, their
- power to fix one's attention, is also the vividness of the
- staring eyes of a pantocrator.
- </p>
- <p> Small wonder that Malevich is seen, in Soviet terms, as the
- bridge between tradition and innovation: a sort of starets, a
- holy man or prophet, whose images invoke deep strands of
- identification with religious faith and folk culture while
- pointing to a future wreathed in theory. The reinstatement of
- Malevich had been under way for years, and yet this show was
- certainly one of the events in the Soviet Union's intellectual
- life that define the cultural consequences of glasnost.
- </p>
- <p> Party lines, like glaciers, do move. But for Soviet
- artists, glasnost seems more like a whirlpool of possibilities,
- most of them still anxiously hypothetical. The artists have had
- to learn not to be optimists. Fifteen years ago, Leonid
- Brezhnev's officials sent plainclothes militia and bulldozers
- to break up and bury an outdoor show of unofficial art in
- Sokolniki, a park on the outskirts of Moscow. This goons' picnic
- would not be repeated today. The socialist realist line, imposed
- by Stalin after 1929 and kept to the end of Brezhnev's reign,
- held that a work of art should fulfill the criteria of partinost
- (party spirit), ideinost (firm commitment to prescribed
- ideology) and narodnost (true portrayal of the life, soul and
- spirit of the people). It has now been undone. "Dissident"
- modernism became a talisman only because it was repressed; once
- tolerated and encouraged, it becomes politically harmless.
- </p>
- <p> The clincher is the Soviet Union's shortage of hard
- currency, combined with the Western art-dealing system's
- devouring search for new product. At last, modern art has a real
- party use: it brings in sterling, dollars and marks. Scores of
- Western dealers are swarming over the Moscow studios. They buy
- through the Ministry of Culture, which generally keeps 40% of
- the purchase price and passes on 10% to 15% to the artist in
- hard currency, which can be spent only outside the U.S.S.R., and
- the rest in rubles. Payment is always slow, and then there is
- tax.
- </p>
- <p> The auction of Soviet contemporary art held, amid vast
- hype, by Sotheby's in Moscow last July was seen by the West as
- a vindication of dissident artists but by many of the artists
- themselves as divisive and even dispiriting. Some lots went for
- unheard-of sums; the painter Grisha Bruskin, whose work had
- been comfortably selling in America for just over $40,000, saw
- a large multipanel piece called Fundamental Lexicon go for
- $415,000, an event that caused much skeptical talk both inside
- and outside the ministry. Landscapes by Svetlana Kopystiansky,
- and her husband Igor's assemblages of old-looking, torn and
- reworked canvases, which had stood well out from the ruck of
- young artists in last year's Venice Biennale, made as much as
- $75,000. Under the circumstances it is hardly surprising that
- a growing number of Soviet artists, once they have signed up
- with a Western dealer, circumvent the whole wearisome apparatus
- by going to Paris or New York City, making their art and then
- going back.
- </p>
- <p> Few Western collectors want the kind of mildly academic
- images of birchwoods in mushroom season, gymnasts and cosmonauts
- that members of the Artists Union tend to produce. They want
- what they are used to: late modernism or post-modernism, a
- souvenir of glasnost on the wall. Thus, since the Ministry of
- Culture is the conduit for modernism to the West, it has become
- a de facto rival to the Artists Union--a switch that has
- caused a good deal of heartburn in the union's ranks.
- </p>
- <p> But anyone who thinks a new market and a thaw in the state
- cultural line have made the Soviet artist's life an easy one
- should think again. The dissemination of art has been built for
- so long around the idea of ideological service that the
- transition to a free-market art economy is tortuous. No Soviet
- artist can depend on the kind of structure that, however
- nominally, supports painters and sculptors in the West. There
- are thousands of art galleries on both sides of the Atlantic but
- comparatively few in Moscow. Outdoor shows are sometimes
- organized by artists in Izmailovo Park. The "art scene" on the
- Arbat is just hole-in-the-corner spaces showing sad, touristy
- little daubs, mixed in with the schlock that passes for folk
- art.
- </p>
- <p> But what would more professional galleries survive on,
- except sales to foreigners? The Soviet Union has virtually no
- internal market for contemporary art. To pay $415,000 for a
- contemporary painting is almost as obscene in a society whose
- average yearly salary for a civil servant is 2,604 rubles
- ($4,300) as the $17 million recently paid for a Jasper Johns was
- in America. There are a few collectors of contemporary art in
- Moscow, but the coin they pay for their collections--jammed
- cheek by jowl, all up the walls and over the door lintels of
- cramped flats--has always been more a matter of sympathy and
- closeness to the artists, a sharing of aesthetic interests, than
- heavy cash.
- </p>
- <p> The flow of art-world information, a torrent in the West,
- is a trickle here. Contemporary shows from abroad are rare,
- though recent work by Robert Rauschenberg was seen at the
- Tretyakov Gallery last February. A young art historian wants to
- write a definitive biography of Wassily Kandinsky, there being
- none in Russian, but she cannot obtain basic texts, like the
- four catalogs of the Kandinsky shows organized in the '80s by
- New York City's Guggenheim Museum, because no Moscow archivist
- had the hard currency to buy them. There are no truly adequate
- general histories of Russian 20th century art published in the
- Russian language. "In the U.S. you have history," chuckles a
- collector. "What we have here is gossip. The art world feels
- scattered, fragmented. There is an atmosphere of mystification
- caused by the emigration of artists." It can be hard even for
- Soviets to find out what other Soviet painters are up to.
- </p>
- <p> Today it is much easier to see work by leading Soviet
- contemporaries in New York City, London and Paris than it is in
- Moscow. In fact, once you are in Moscow, there are only two
- ways to do so. One is to visit Polyanka, the deconsecrated 17th
- century Orthodox church on Polyanka Street in Moscow that is
- used as a depot and point of sale to Western dealers by the
- Ministry of Culture. There hundreds of paintings by contemporary
- artists, stacked against one another under conditions so
- primitive they would give heartburn to any New York gallery
- owner, sit in racks, while embrowned, battered frescoes of the
- Annunciation and Visitation look down.
- </p>
- <p> The other is to see the work in the studio, which, owing to
- the difficulties of finding addresses in Moscow and the
- suspicions some artists unsurprisingly have about strangers, is
- not an exercise for the dilettante. "Unofficial" artists are at
- the bottom of the official pole whose summit is the Academy of
- Arts, that august body of 77 academicians and 99 alternate
- members. Among them are the state propagandists, whose mission
- it is to turn out the unending stream of statues of Lenin (with
- benign and resolute features that grow more Asiatic the further
- east they go) for public places from Minsk to Irkutsk. Many an
- unofficial artist finds himself in the predicament of Nikolai
- Filatov, whose large canvases--a fervent compost of '50s-style
- abstract expressionism and broken-up cubofuturist planes--are
- beginning to sell in the West, so he has hard currency but
- nowhere to paint. To get studio space in Moscow on an official
- basis, you must belong to the Artists Union and do "real"
- aesthetic work. Some of the best-known figures in the Soviet
- avant-garde, like Erik Bulatov and Oleg Vasilyev, who share
- working space, are still officially registered as illustrators
- of children's books.
- </p>
- <p> So younger artists squat. Some work in crumbling tenements
- scheduled for demolition, dank shells with tangles of extension
- cords carrying bootleg electricity up their gapped stairwells.
- Here they agonize about the "spiritual crisis" with which
- glasnost has confronted Soviet artists--the sudden conversion
- of "dissident" art from a talisman to a commodity. One hears
- 28-year-olds, too young to remember the '60s, waxing nostalgic
- over the "purity" induced among artists by former repression.
- </p>
- <p> The idea the Western market tends to promote, that the
- Soviet Union is a mine of little-known contemporary pictorial
- genius, is mostly sales talk. Stalinism deformed or aborted two
- generations of artistic talent, and no culture recovers so fast.
- The sense of a time lag is acute to the visitor. Certainly,
- there is no shortage of artists doing earnestly secondhand
- versions of last year's, or last decade's, Western model. But
- there is also some extremely serious talent: Natalia Nesterova,
- for instance, with her brooding groups of figures, locked in
- thick, silvery paint and dense with melancholy, or, in the area
- of abstraction, Erick Stenberg. In the 1960s and '70s,
- Stenberg's work was a prolonged meditation on constructivism and
- suprematism, the chief movements of the "classical" Russian
- avant-garde in the years just before and after the revolution:
- finely tuned planar constructions in a pale, deep space. Lately,
- in a way that parallels Malevich's return to peasant themes in
- the 1920s, Stenberg has deepened his color and turned to images
- of a remote village where he spends part of his time: bare
- roads, cottages, grave markers, religious symbols like the fish
- and the Cross, all emblems of an ancient Russia that continues
- to exist below ideology.
- </p>
- <p> The recent political past lies heavily on new Soviet
- painting, producing a largely original blend of conceptual art
- and pop, based on reflections about the state styles of
- propaganda. In the West, the best-known artists working in this
- vein are Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, with their
- wonderfully pointed pastiches of Stalinist--and American--political
- kitsch. In Moscow, there are older men like Ilya
- Kabakov, whose paintings and installations of documents, scraps
- and the somewhat hermetic flotsam of his own past family life,
- form a Gogolesque narrative of the meager lives of imaginary,
- pathetic Russian characters--The Man Who Never Threw Anything
- Away, The Untalented Artist. The constant theme of his work is
- the absurd gap between the promises of the system and its grim
- disappointments. Bulatov is fascinated by the seepage of
- official art language, in all its enthusiasm and coerciveness,
- through daily life. In Spring at the Spa, the white statues of
- Lenin and Maxim Gorky stand in the banal dreamy park (in fact,
- a state resort for union officials and their families), a faint
- allusion to the statues in a Watteau garden, recalling an
- idealized past. There is something very Russian--a spiritual
- dimension, not just a linguistic preoccupation--to the work
- of both men.
- </p>
- <p> There are also fine "conservative" artists in Moscow, not
- dinosaurs of socialist realism but painters whose own
- sympathies lie further back, in the Florentine Renaissance or
- 19th century Paris. One of these is Dmitri Zhilinsky, whose work
- can rise to a most disciplined poignancy, as in his animal
- Pieta, a self-portrait holding the corpse of his red Chow dog
- killed by a passing car. Yet it is as hard to find a "modernist"
- with a good word for Zhilinsky as it is to get Zhilinsky to
- concede there might be some merit in, say, the recent
- Rauschenberg show at the Tretyakov. Old animosities run deep;
- it will be years before the Soviet art world is like ours,
- blandly tolerant of everything except failure in the market.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-