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Tag: russia
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Letters in Exile, No. 6
By Maria AgureevaSince March I have edited Letters in Exile with Maria Agureeva. Artillery generously offered Maria and other artists who had fled Ukraine and Russia an important platform from which to express their feelings, voice their grief and protest, and to share stories of courage and compassion.
There are two books I have recalled while editing. In one, by the diplomat and historian George Kennan, he expressed in the 1960s that the two most important issues to be solved in our life time are climate degradation and nuclear proliferation. As we see in Russia and Ukraine, they are inextricably linked with the ongoing state sponsored violence. The other book, The March of Folly by historian Barbara Tuchman, looks at the avoidable but mindless paths to war, ecological catastrophe, and destruction of civilizations, even though the people of those time knew better. It seems to me there is a dominant strain of reactionary violence in collective human behavior that is deeply disturbing.
The words of the Buddhist activist Thich Nhat Hahn helps show me a sane way forward; “To prepare for war, to give millions of men and women the opportunity to practice killing day and night in their hearts, is to plant millions of seeds of violence, anger, frustration and fear that will be passed on for generations to come. We know very well that airplanes, guns and bombs cannot remove wrong perceptions. Only loving speech and compassionate listening can help people correct wrong perceptions. The practice of peace and reconciliation is one of the most vital and artistic of human actions.” —Clayton Campbell, Editor
Maria Agureeva
I want to end Letters in Exile for now with the release of a sixth installment, #NoWar. To all of you who have followed my blog, from my heart I wish to thank you very much; to the long list of everyone who took part in previous blogs, helped my family leave Russia, and especially to the artists who have spoken their truth through Letters in Exile. Because of this unexpected and incredible support, I will be back in Los Angeles soon, and will resume my life there. There were moments I didn’t think this would happen, and now I look forward to how my practice will unfold, informed by my experiences.
I spoke with Digital Art Month’s curator Jess Conatser to highlight artists creating AR and video artwork that inspires peace and stands for #NOWAR in Ukraine. The festival is organized and curated by Elena Zavelev, Andrea Steuer of CADAF & Jess Conatser of Studio As We Are.
For AR please use your phone to access them.
Hermine Bourdin
Dance For Peace (Augmented Reality- open on your phone to interact) https://www.instagram.com/ar/314068410688765/
Dance for peace is the performance of the French dancer Eugenie Drion re-transcribed on one of my sculptures using MOCAP.
Yamid Botina
Invisible, Video, 1:01 minutes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cg70rHEVYo4
Botina’s approach to the conflict in Ukraine, based on the things that cannot be destroyed.
Maria Agureeva
The First Universe, Video, 45 seconds, Sound Art Dario Duarte Nunez. https://www.instagram.com/tv/Cda7_ERAViH/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
How quickly we forgot about Love. How often we perceive the heart as only an organ, as a motor that carries through the body, along with blood, gunpowder of war, fear, hatred, confusion and other toxins.
But our hearts are so much more. It is an object that exists simultaneously in billions of universes, where Love resides— the very first of them.
Clayton Campbell
Ghost Ships (photographic print, 2022, 66” x 88”), March 2022 These days a density of fractured images have arrived in my disturbed sleep.
Despairing of the inevitability of Men; their fogs of war, addictive cravings for spilling blood, sexual subjugation, unscripted power stripped of knowledge, wisdom, and compassion,
We travel onward through the dark night of the soul in our Ghost Ships.
Jullian Young
Caged in Red (Augmented Reality- open on your phone to interact) https://www.instagram.com/ar/5230824633642795/
This artwork places you inside a crumbling red cage surrounded by bluebirds whose yellowish tint is only cast in light
Kushtrim Juniku
No War (Augmented Reality- open on your phone to interact) https://www.instagram.com/ar/511333743820354/
NO WAR is an AR effect that inspires to speak up against the war in Ukraine .
Zoran Poposki
Peace Piece, 2022, animated video generated by AI in collaboration with artist and director Polyptech. 4K video, sound, 1:00 minute https://vimeo.com/697821931/cbc89c0045
“Peace Piece” is a short animated video generated by artificial intelligence (AI) in collaboration with award-winning contemporary artist and director Polyptech.
The visuals are a series of AI-generated artworks created by Polyptech through text-to-image synthesis utilizing a neural network. The neural network has been trained by Polyptech through thousands of iterations to generate visuals based on a string of keywords associated with peace, such as pacifism, no war, harmony, demilitarization, empathy, love, human rights, social justice, sisterhood, humanity, love, etc.
The lyrics in the video represent an AI-generated poem co-written with Polyptech, based on Emily Dickinson’s reflection upon peace and belonging, “I many times thought Peace had come”. The AI uses a generative text model developed by Open AI, leveraging machine learning and deep learning to achieve the generation of natural language.
The music in the film is a generative sound piece created by an AI music algorithm.
Editor’s Note: If you would like to donate to Ukrainian relief efforts, you may make a direct contribution to the Global Giving Ukrainian Relief Fund at this link. Or please donate to a charity of your choice that will assist the people of Ukraine.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/ukraine-crisis-relief-fund/
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Letters in Exile, No. 5
By Maria AgureevaArtists are experiencing a sense of gratitude for the unexpected support and basic kindness shown to them. In the midst of exile and displacement, often the best of humanity reasserts itself.
As Maria says in her fifth blog, “So many of my friends and colleagues who were also forced to leave Russian and Ukraine tell incredible stories. I asked some artists to share their stories.”
Two persons, Maxim Zmeyev, a photojournalist; and a young musician, Yaroslav Dimov, share their stories. —Clayton Campbell
April 20, 2022
Recently I was at a reception at the Czech embassy and for almost 1.5 hours the discussion was only about the war. Secular meetings become like “war councils.” People raised issues that are now worrying everyone: how such an event is possible in the 21st century, how to help Ukraine, or will there be a nuclear incident as the war expands? However, several speakers said that now it is an important task to support the artists, journalists or dissident musicians who do not support the existing regime in Russia.
Before I fled Moscow, I was isolated, alone. I feel such incredible support now! I have never received so much help from friends and strangers from other countries. I had believed that people’s humanity in the Metaverse era was in short supply. Yet now a hundred thousand acts of unselfish generosity have awakened people into a spirit of gratitude. Everyone helps each other, and I have been deeply touched.
When the war began, friends stepped up, finding a residence for me and my daughter in Berlin. An American foundation unhesitatingly gave me a grant that has allowed us to survive. And miracles continue to happen in my life. This gives me hope not to give up and continue to engage in art, to which I have dedicated my entire conscious life.
Action in front of the Russian Embassy in Vilnius against the violence of Ukrainian women by Russian soldiers. Photo: Edvard Blaževič / LRT So many of my friends and colleagues who were also forced to leave Russia and Ukraine relate incredible stories. I asked some artists to share their stories:
“My name is Maxim Zmeyev, I am 35 years old and a contemporary artist and photojournalist. I was a photographer for Reuters, as well as a freelance photographer for the AFP and independent media in Russia. Russian troops attacked Ukraine on February 24 on the orders of Russian President Putin. Russia’s aggression continues to this day. As I write this letter the Russian military continues to destroy Ukrainian cities and kill Ukrainians. This is a fact and from March 4, 2022 the Russian Federation could see up to 15 years in prison for disseminating or discussing this fact. On March 5, I flew to Istanbul where I am now. I’m looking for an opportunity to move to Europe or America and am in contact with Journalists Without Borders—who are trying to help me. I hope I will have the opportunity to live on. I have a friend who is a French journalist, Anne. She is helping me a lot right now and gives me hope. It’s very important to feel that if you’re from Russia, it doesn’t mean that the whole world hates you. For people like me who are against the war, it gives hope that peace can come.”
Max Zmeyev, Red Mirror (project in progress), 2022
Photo collages from “Red Mirror” series consists of photos taken in the video game which takes place in Russian/Soviet reality. These games were made by developers from countries that were part of the USSR and/or Soviet Empire. These collages also contain elements of documentary archive photos of the USSR.“My name is Yaroslav Dimov, I am 18 years old, from Kiev. All my life I have tried to give people positive emotions through music. In October 2021, my friends and I created a group and we intensively gave concerts in popular venues in the capital, where many came to hear our work. Our goal was for people to learn to listen to each other. On the third day of the war, I miraculously managed to leave my home and get rid of the hellish sounds that Russian rockets made, I just wanted to live. The road to Europe was for me a leap into the unknown and a step towards a new life. In Berlin, My family and I were treated with understanding, care and support. Kind people helped us with a place to stay and every day they offer their help; it’s cool that they consider us their friends. Our neighbors provided a few musical instruments and space to practice my music. Here I met musicians from Ukraine and we managed to participate in several charity concerts in support of our country. We believe that goodwill overcome evil and music will help this.”
It seems to me that against the backdrop of this ongoing madness, we should unite and help each other—the only way to endure. The whole world now feels vulnerable and only unity can help to survive. Our strength is in unity and the ability to hear each other.
As I prepare to leave Berlin at the end of the month, nothing is certain. The war could ripple through more countries, creating widespread financial ruin and devastation. Or, it might stop, and the world will blossom with the spring.
Yaroslav Dimov, personal archive, Kyiv, 2021 To be continued…
—Maria Agureeva
Editor’s Note: If you would like to donate to Ukrainian relief efforts, you may make a direct contribution to the Global Giving Ukrainian Relief Fund at this link. Or please donate to a charity of your choice that will assist the people of Ukraine.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/ukraine-crisis-relief-fund/
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Letters in Exile, No. 4
By Maria AgureevaAs Maria was working on Blog 4, I happened upon an article about photographer Edward Burtynksy, who is of Ukrainian descent and still has family there. He was scheduled to photograph in Ukraine this year for other reasons than the war. His work has been postponed. He said of what is happening in Ukraine and Russia, and that Maria’s blog speaks directly to, “Unbelievable, the amount of hate and trauma that’s being inflicted. [Putin]’s destroying the future of a whole generation of Russians and traumatizing the whole country of Ukraine. It’ll take generations to heal.”
Artists respond to war situations in various ways, as anyone would be. When undergoing stress and trauma caused by dislocation, loss of statehood, livelihood, physical harm and perhaps death, people are changed physically and emotionally. Overtime, personality and values are taken over by trauma responses, making living life so difficult because all trust is gone. What is happening in Ukraine and Russia is a cautionary tale for free-minded people, seeing how easy it has been for personal freedoms to be taken away by an autocratic, conservative government. Maria suggests that artists can, in spite of everything that may happen to them, find the way back again to a full embrace of life. —Clayton Campbell
Lviv, Ukraine–March 26, 2022: Concert near Lviv National Opera. Photo: Ruslan-Lytvyn April 15, 2022
The mission was impossible.
Since the ’90s, when the first contemporary galleries appeared in Russia, art began to actively develop and be included in the international context. After 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea, everything changed. Perhaps we created our own bubble of illusions, inflated more and more as Russian artists found success. What we thought we were building, a free-minded cultural community, did not transfer to the vast majority of Russians. They had no interest in our values and creative pursuits.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, restrictive regulations on artmaking were canceled and for the next 20 years artists could fight for the freedom of their art without fear of punishment from the state. Integration into the global cultural space supported this illusion: that Russian art could be free. This is the era I grew up in as an artist. But another fate was prepared for us.
There was some change in those two decades. The influence of contemporary art helped to penetrate a historically unfree land. Surveys from 2021 show that at least 30% of the Russian population put freedom as their first priority and do not support repressive actions by state authorities. Yet this minority has been silenced as artists are now squeezed out of their country.
This liberal change of sensibility, especially in younger generations, threatened the government. Over the past five years censorship in Russia has returned. High-profile artists have been publicly punished. Kirill Serebrennikov, born in Ukraine, is one of the most prominent theater directors in Russia. He spoke out against the Russian annexing of Crimea. As a result, his apartment was raided shortly after. He was sentenced in June 2020 to a three-year suspended prison sentence and was also issued a fine over trumped-up charges of embezzlement. A Moscow court canceled the suspended sentence after questioning the filmmaker twice last month. The director left Russia two weeks ago and is residing in Germany.
Still from the film Leto, Director Kirill Serebrennikov Still from the film Petrov’s Flu, Director Kirill Serebrennikov In another example of public shaming, feminist artist and LGBTQ+ activist Yulia Tsvetkova is on trial in Russia, facing charges of disseminating pornography based on her artwork featuring the naked female body. She was arrested in November 2019 and was forced to pay two fines under Russia’s notorious “gay propaganda” law. She remained under house arrest until March 16, facing up to six years in prison if found guilty of illegally producing and distributing pornographic materials on the internet. The current case has terrible implications for the future of women’s rights in Russia, as it marks the first time an activist has faced criminal charges to produce feminist art.
Yulia Tsvetkova and her viral body-positive drawings A Woman is Not a Doll. Photo: Anna Khodyreva Yulia Tsvetkova, Untitled, 2018. Text in red- “You don’t owe anyone anything” Around her are comments like “smile, lose weight, family, etc.” Yulia Tsvetkova, “My body is not pornography!” reads the protestors placard. “Is this an Article 242?” wonders the policeman. Article 242 of Russia’s Criminal Code criminalizes the creation and exchange of pornographic materials. Image ©: Yulia Tsvetkova Authority of most kinds has never trusted art. Art makes it possible to think critically. People who contest various forms of power and control are uncomfortable to the status quo. We are viewed by Authority as uncontrollable. Like a mindless machine the State can only suppress, alienate or kill us.
In the supposed socialism of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev (former Russian president) recently stated that Russian culture will not close itself off from the world, but will focus on “adequately minded people”, those who share and support their position. This is about staying in power
Four years ago, when I left for Los Angeles, I was able to feel the whole abyss that still separates the contemporary art of Russia and other free countries. It has become, I fear, an unbridgeable chasm.
Many young people were among those out demonstrating in Russian cities. Here, a young woman in St. Petersburg is detained by officers. (Photo: Dmitri Lovetsky/The Associated Press) The liberal change of sensibility in the last 20 years, especially in younger generations, threatens the government. I can definitely say that the generation of my daughter, who is now 16 years old, is completely different. They have a sense of empathy, lack of fear, and think freely. More than 400 teenagers were detained in Moscow in February and March at anti-war rallies. As a result, on February 24, 19 protocols were drawn up to punish a perceived failure by parents to fulfill their obligations to raise minors, due to the participation of children in rallies. They include fines and possible deprivation of parental rights in case of repeated detention.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev attend a meeting with members of the government in Moscow, Russia January 15, 2020. Sputnik/Dmitry Astakhov/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo. They warned the United States on Wednesday that the world could spiral towards a nuclear dystopia if Washington pressed on with what the Kremlin casts as a long-term plot to destroy Russia. It is beginning to seem that the war will continue for a long time; the wreckage of Ukrainian museums and concert halls will smoke in ruins for more years; the Russian cultural spaces supporting truly free art will return not soon. Russian President Putin recently spoke live on Russian TV and voiced a phrase popular in his circles: “The war between Russia and the United States will continue until the last Ukrainian.”
It’s hard for me to imagine now how artists will come out of this meat grinder. It may only be possible to truly talk about this only after the end of the shooting. What Ukrainian and Russian artists are now experiencing will sooner or later be embodied in their work. This will be a whole stage in the global cultural agenda. And it shouldn’t be lost, blurry. This should be accepted, comprehended as part of a new culture, even more free!
It seems to me that most artists I am meeting and hearing from have quickly developed a different attitude to their work. I am rethinking my past work and the topics covered. There is a greater sense of responsibility. The topics of ecology, gender issues, our future, have not lost their relevance, but now my focus has shifted, everything becoming much sharper and more subtle.
I invite other artists to share with me what they are experiencing today and I will publish it on my blog.
—Maria Agureeva
Editor’s Note: If you would like to donate to Ukrainian relief efforts, you may make a direct contribution to the Global Giving Ukrainian Relief Fund at this link. Or please donate to a charity of your choice that will assist the people of Ukraine.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/ukraine-crisis-relief-fund/
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Letters in Exile, No. 3
By Maria AgureevaIn her third blog, Maria considers the testimony of four artists from Ukraine and Russia. Each speaks powerfully about how the war is impacting them. We like to say artists speak truth to power. Courageous artists do this, yet often with severe consequences. Some of them are highlighted in the blog. Maria speaks to the trauma of war, exile and disruption, how it creates memories that may never be dispelled. Like an earthquake, it is visceral and ripples through the body, reemerging with each new tremor. Like so many artists, historically and in the present, she questions the relevance of her practice in the face of the violent end of meaning, rationality, and order. —Clayton Campbell
April 6, 2022
Six weeks since the start of the war. I wonder about artists; has their purpose been crushed by millstones of war and politics? Is their work made irrelevant by the war? We all have to reconsider what we are doing going forward. For the exiled artists I meet in Berlin and communicate with in Ukraine and Russia, their new reality is an existential shock. In Ukraine, abundant with talented creative people, artists are forced to wear body armor and defend their country on an equal footing with the military. Russia has so many brilliant artists who made important contributions to world culture. Now artists are forced to be outcasts from their country if they do not support the regime.
Alexey Karpenko, pianist from Lviv, Ukraine
With the beginning of the war, I brought a piano to the Lviv railway station to play for people, namely refugees. They need support more than anyone, because they abandoned their homes to save their lives. Music has always been an antidepressant, soothing and inspiring. I play every day for the people, for which I received a lot of gratitude from the refugees. At the beginning, I could not imagine that it would reach a planetary scale. The video in which I play during the sirens was seen by the daughter of the famous composer Hans Zimmer; she showed it to her father. On the same evening, he personally recorded a video in support of me and showed it in front of 15,000 people at a concert in London. In this way, I can help my country to declare the information about Ukraine in order to enlist the support of people from many countries.
Alexey Karpenko. The pianist plays under the air raid sirens at Lviv Railway Station. John Stanmeyer (National geographic). Music Hans Zimmer “Time”. 20th March Yevgenia Isaeva, artist from Saint Peterburg.
After her anti-war performance in St. Petersburg’s center, Yevgenia, Isaeva was arrested and fined for vandalism and held for eight days. My heart is bleeding. I feel that it’s helpless to appeal to reason. That is why I’m appealing to your hearts. Women, children and elderly people are dying in Ukraine everyday. From bombings, hunger, the impossibility of getting out of the rubble and obtaining medicine. Their graves, topped with self-made crosses, turn black in the yards and playgrounds. Thousands of injured and mutilated people, millions of broken lives. If you can find any justification for this, your heart is blind. Find the strength in yourself for mercy and compassion, do not support bloodshed!”
Yevgenia Isaeva. performance My heart is bleeding. 27th March. 2022. Saint Petersburg.
Photography composite from EuroNews, BBC News.Ilya Fedotov-Fedorov, artist from Moscow (now lives in NY)
As a queer artist, I am against Putin’s regime and against his war in Ukraine. I’m speaking out in support of the Ukrainian people—and the LGBTQ community around the world. The war in Ukraine is a crime. I cannot remain silent, and it is my responsibility to speak out against it. To be a queer artist in Russia is already a political statement. Queer art in Russia is illegal. My exhibitions have been censored. The media has routinely cut pieces mentioning queer topics. The government’s “gay propaganda” law carries a prison term of five years. And now, the new “fake news” law carries up to 15 years in prison. I am now in New York now, and I cannot go back to Russia.
Ilya Fedotov-Fedorov, Image from the video- A Snake and a Bat are Girlfriends of the Octopus, 2019-21 https://vimeo.com/502223682
Nikita Shokhov, artist From Moscow (now lives in USA)
The massacre that Russian Federation forced in Ukraine is a tragedy of European society. RF discredited itself in the international arena, it is dragging Russian creative future into the swamp. The war shall be stopped right now to save the invaluable lives of the Ukrainian people, their happiness, and freedom. This is a historical mistake of the RF. The longer this war progresses, the harder the future will be for Russians and our culture. I insist on helping Russian dissidents, artists, activists, scientists, cultural entrepreneurs who are contributing to the liberation of Russia from this murderous political machine.
Dragzina– video, Presented at Spring/Break Art Show Los Angeles 2022, theme “HEARSAY:HERESY” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ey_iUkRg60A&t=134s
If this horror ever ends, I feel artists will no longer be the same. Will we be needed at all in that future, another world? Will we be able to return to our old practices, ideas, interests? How will they be transformed by a world on fire? Will our art be wanted, will it matter, showing the permanent traces of wounds on our bodies and psyches?
—Maria Agureeva
Editor’s Note: If you would like to donate to Ukrainian relief efforts, you may make a direct contribution to the Global Giving Ukrainian Relief Fund at this link. Or please donate to a charity of your choice that will assist the people of Ukraine.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/ukraine-crisis-relief-fund/
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Letters in Exile, No. 2
By Maria AgureevaThe soul of the arts in Russia is withering. In Ukraine it is being obliterated, literally. In this second blog, Maria is speaking to the loss of personal freedoms occurring in Russia that is deeply disturbing, and another fall out of the war. In Ukraine, the loss of life and destruction of the cultural infrastructure is of another terrible order. In the past month, Berlin has become a safe harbor for many Russian and Ukranian artists. Maria is temporarily living at UfaFabrik International Art Center. —Clayton Campbell
February 27, 2022- Maria and team work on a project that will not be released. Her team has requested their names not be used for their security and safety.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=54jVwEXMwL8
February 27th, 5 secondsMarch 31, 2022
Two years had passed since the start of the pandemic, and my practice and projects had been on hold. Finally, this past January I was full of hope and anticipation about new horizons; I anticipated a fresh wave of creative activity.
On March 3rd I was scheduled to open my new art work, Pulse of the Earth is Your Pulse, a collaboration with the new digital-art platform. I had spent months on my mult-disciplinary project that included performance, sound art, and a limited collection of designer clothes based on my digital designs. I realized it would be unethical to open a project in Russia during a state of war. We couldn’t maintain the illusion of normality; the world was turned upside down. When there is so much violence in the world, it’s hard to think about art.
From the project “Pulse of the earth is your pulse”. 2 minutes. Sound art Dario Duarte Nunez.
Maria’s practice proposes “an alternative scenario in which the human body will develop not in the direction of manufacturability, but in the direction of natural symbiosis, as a result of which new forms of life are synthesized – no longer a person, but not yet a plant or animal, but something borderline.” Environmental and climate change priorities have been diminished because of the war. The video of Pulse……is its first appearance in the US.
https://vimeo.com/429195488The team collaborating on Pulse of the Earth is Your Pulse assembled on February 27th. We were going to finish my project, knowing that it would not be released. I was recording a voiceover for the final interactive part. Working was the only thing that kept us from losing our minds. We were all beginning to experience real trauma in our bodies from the stress. I was shaking as I recorded a text I had written for the piece. I spoke about the unpredictability of just being, about how humanity has entered an era of complete unpredictability, how we can no longer imagine what lies ahead. I talked about how the laws of the past will no longer work in the future and some kind of global restructuring/reassembly awaits us. I wrote this text a month before the war, not imagining it was already underway.
Ukrainian-Russian artist Aljoscha art action on February 24, first day of the war:
“As an European artist of Ukrainian-Russian origin, I stood naked and unprotected as an animals and plants are in the silent protest against any kind of ideological madness. Stop insanity, seek for kindness!”Over the years artists, curators, gallery owners, and critics had painstakingly helped build an openminded cultural environment in Russia. But now, contemporary culture has been rolled back. It is devastating on so many levels. International projects are cancelled because artists cannot come to Russia. Many Russian artists have gone into exile and do not see a future for themselves where they cannot freely express their opinion.
I have been asked by my colleagues not to use in my blog their names or the name of the platform where we were going to launch my project. It is for their protection. They are all frightened and worried that any affiliation with the blog will be seen by state security and held against them, ruining their chances for future work. Some of them have left Russia, others are still there.
04/04/2022 rally at the Brandenburg Gate, Berlin, in response to the actions of the Russian army in Bucha, Ukraine. Russia is waging two wars, one on the territory of Ukraine and the second inside the country with its dissidents. Every day new laws are coming out that restrict personal freedoms. People who do not agree with them are looking for opportunities to leave Russia. This month all independent media in Russia was closed and banned. Expressing an opinion not coinciding with the policy of the authorities has become a criminal prosecution. This stressful emotional reality, which we all felt every minute with the start of the war is suffocating. It is hard to imagine that humanity can still repeat these terrible scenarios after all the historical experience that we have lived through.
I hope my journey will lead me back in Los Angeles in a few months, and then my family will start over again.
In next week’s blog I share thoughts from Ukrainian musician Alexy Karpenko and Russian artist Nikita Shokhov.
—Maria Agureeva
Editor’s Note: If you would like to donate to Ukrainian relief efforts, you may make a direct contribution to the Global Giving Ukrainian Relief Fund at this link. Or please donate to a charity of your choice that will assist the people of Ukraine.
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/ukraine-crisis-relief-fund/
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Letters in Exile
By Maria AgureevaSince her residency at the 18th Street Arts Center four years ago, artist Maria Agureeva has been based in Los Angeles. Born in Ukraine and attending art school in Moscow, she travels periodically to Moscow, where a gallery supports her work and various collaborative projects. All of that has now collapsed, and she has been left with nothing. Russian artists and intelligentsia have been leaving to escape the growing oppression of the Russian State. On March 8, Maria fled with her daughter while there were still several border crossings open. With the help of a small network of friends, they landed in Berlin at the UfaFabrik International Art Center. It will be just one stop on her journey going forward and returning to Los Angeles. Her story and observations, and those of other artists during this time of war, are the subject of her blog. —Clayton Campbell
Maria Agureeva, Dust, multi channel video installation, live sound art by Godtease, 58 min. Coaxial Arts Foundation, Los Angeles, 2019 March 24, 2022
I would like to start this blog from the moment I left Russia, March 8—perhaps forever—from the moment one chapter of my life ended and a new one began, where there are no plans and no understanding of what the future will be like.
I was on the verge of giving up my fleeing Russia when the Russian customs denied my invitation letter for a foreign artist residency on the Finnish border. My daughter and I went to the railway station and bought train tickets, without any guarantee that we would be let through. We were able to persuade them, because in Russia March 8 is a holiday: International Women’s Day. I will now remember that date with warmth for other reasons!
Technosphere, Supercollider Gallery x Femmebit, Spring Break Art Show, Los Angeles 2020. Curators: Richelle Gribble, Janna Avner. Artwork: Maria Agureeva, Untitled, plastic, neon, wood, synthetic fabric, mixed media, 69 x 31 x 27 inches, 2019 I have always been far from politics; I thought in other categories, which was reflected in my work. But there is now an exception. The war between the country in which I was born (Ukraine) and the country in which, despite everything, I was able to become an artist (Russia), breaks my worldview. Currently, my concern as an artist is with environmental issues and the anthropological impact on nature. Now, I understand that there are sudden events in life that change the picture of the world. I experience this consciously and with wide open eyes. When grown men compare who has the bigger dick—changing the topography of the continents—their toxic testosterone poisons everything, oozing through the pores of people on both sides of the front, releasing hatred, corrupting consciousness and nature.
The lack of freedom to think, to express one’s opinion—including in art—has led to this war. It is not a consequence of the will of one person. The majority of the Russian population consciously abandoned freedom and will. This was their choice. It was driven by State officials who competed among themselves to create laws that restricted freedom. I think of how science-fiction writers in Russia (very popular among thinking people) foreshadowed what I experience now. During the Soviet Union, the Strugatsky Brothers wrote the novel Inhabited Island. It describes a planet where a group of “fathers” rules in one of the countries. To control the population, they destroy free people while the majority of the population sings patriotic hymns. On the first day of the war, I found myself in the pages of this novel; my colleagues and I in emotional pain, and the majority of the population vehemently supporting the government’s actions.
Maria Agureeva, Berlin, March 23, 2022 We artists need to stay sober. To do this, we must look for places and opportunities to continue to work, reflect and create. We are just a part of history that always moves through cataclysms and wars. It must be condemned, it must be prevented, and it must be experienced when it is no longer possible to change. I could not work now in Russia where the war found me. Artists must continue to communicate with people like ourselves who are ready to speak up and perceive truth through the language of images and meanings.
— Maria Agureeva. http://agureeva.com