The experimental group: Ilya Kabakov, Moscow conceptualism, Soviet avant‑gardes

Contents: Dead souls Bureaucratic expressionism Answers of the experimental group The rituals of nonlife Kasha and humanism The man who collected the opinions of others. A compelling study of unofficial postwar Soviet art, The Experimental Group takes as its point of departure a subject of strange fascination: the life and work of renowned professional illustrator and conceptual artist Ilya Kabakov. Kabakov’s art — iconoclastic installations, paintings, illustrations, and texts — delicately experiments with such issues as history, mortality, and disappearance, and here exemplifies a much larger narrative about the work of the artists who rose to prominence just as the Soviet Union began to disintegrate. By placing Kabakov and his conceptualist peers in line with our own contemporary perspective, Matthew Jesse Jackson suggests that the art that emerged in the wake of Stalin belongs neither entirely to its lost communist past nor to a future free from socialist nostalgia. Instead, these artists and their work produced a critical and controversial chapter in the as yet unwritten history of global contemporary art.

Details

Personalities

Kabakov Ilya

Type

Book

Place of publication

Chicago, Illinois

Year

2010

Number of pages

316 pages

Language

English

ISBN

9780226389417

Open stacks or available on request

Open stacks

Illustrations

Yes

Bibliography

No

UDC code and author sign

709.204 Каб

Volumes

1

Related publications