Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Avdei Ter-Oganian

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Dan Clore

unread,
May 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM5/29/99
to
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
http://www.ainfos.ca/
________________________________________________

Avdei Ter-Oganian

By Charles Freund and Julia Volfson
avdei_sup...@eudoramail.com

We wish to bring to your attention the case of the Moscow artist Avdei
Ter-Oganian, who is currently facing a possible prison term of up to
four
years for "crimes" of art. Mr. Ter-Oganian's case, in which he is pitted
against a disturbing alliance of Russia's religious and political
establishments, represents an important turning point in the struggle
for
free speech in post-Soviet Russia: Whether he is exonerated or
imprisoned
will have a lasting impact on free and open expression in Russia. Any
attention that can be given to Mr. Ter-Oganian's case outside Russia is
welcomed not only by him, but by all Russians who support the continuing
development of a free, secular society. Ter-Oganian's "crime."

Last December, Avdei Ter-Oganian took part in Moscow's Art Manege Fair.
His contribution was a performance drawn from a five-year satirical art
"project," in which he performs as the director of an imaginary art
gallery with the Futurist name, "Forward!" (Ter-Oganian runs a real art
school in Moscow: The School of Contemporary Art.) This project's
purpose
is to reflect and comment on the Russian art scene, which is attempting
to
reassert itself in the midst of notorious economic corruption, a
continuing "sovietized" social mentality, and a general preference for
visual realism. Ter-Oganian believes that contemporary Russian art
galleries face the choice of either being prisoners of the money and
tastes of the Russian nouveaux riches, or non-profit organizations.

The art fair installation presented a satirical portrayal of naive
"nihilism": It featured a provincial artist who was responding to
foreign
cultural influences by aping Western radicalism. Specifically,
Ter-Oganian's installation offered to "sell" modish "degeneracy" to any
paying customer in the following way: The "young nihilist" would
desecrate
a cheap, mass-produced religious icon for 50 rubles; the client could
desecrate an icon under the tutelage of the nihilist for 20 rubles;
desecration consultations could take place at the client's home for 10
rubles. The targets of this satire were those galleries trading in
commercialized Western radicalism. A number of fairgoers entered into
the
spirit of the performance, and eight "actions" took place. Some cheap
icons were destroyed with a hatchet; one was painted over with a
profanity. However, others objected to the treatment of these icons,
although they were low-quality, cartoonish reproductions sold on the
street (and thus themselves commercial lampoons of the real thing). As
the
scandal grew, Ter-Oganian's exhibit was closed, and further performances
were prohibited.

The consequences

Ter-Oganian controversy intensified, with numerous attacks appearing in
the press. Religious authorities seized on the issue, citing the artist
as
a literally satanic influence in Russia. His case came to be perceived
by
officials as a matter of state importance and a threat to the
credibility
of the Moscow Patriarchate. In TV appearances and in newspaper articles,
Russian Orthodox priests openly called for the artist's punishment as
"Satan's man." They proclaimed it a necessity to control the action of
artists in general, because, as they framed it, the artist's soul is the
easiest target for satanic temptation. Ter-Oganian soon came to be
associated with all of Russia's problems. In the Russian parliament,
handbills were distributed appealing for action against Ter-Oganian so
as
to protect Russia from further economic crises. In the end, the Moscow
prosecutor initiated a criminal case against him, charging him with
incitement of religious hatred.

The stakes

Avdei Ter-Oganian is currently ill and awaiting trial in Moscow. (The
trial has been postponed pending his recovery.) Defending him in the
popular press has become next to impossible, because the issues have
been
successfully framed by church authorities as Good vs. Evil. An
especially
disturbing aspect of the case is that state officials have made common
cause with religious zealots against the artist. One political official,
a
reconstructed Communist, actually asserted to the Russian press that
"Orthodoxy is the basis of Russia's political and judicial system," and
that therefore Ter-Oganian and his supporters are enemies of the state.
One of the leading witnesses against Ter-Oganian will be no less than
the
Dean of the authoritative (and heavily subsidized) Department of Visual
Arts at Moscow State University, who will testify in support of
Ter-Oganian's imprisonment on the theory that, whereas art should be
"constructive," Ter-Oganian's art is "destructive." Associating oneself
with Ter-Oganian has become dangerous. A recent effort by the Guelman
Gallery in Moscow to stage a benefit for him drew a group of
hatchet-wielding, anti-Ter-Oganian Cossacks who threatened the lives of
both the artist and the director, and who defaced Ter-Oganian's work.

Members of the Russian press assembled to cover the trial on its
scheduled
opening date were attacked by a large crowd of anti-Ter-Oganian
demonstrators. Contemporary Russian artists are emerging from long years
of Soviet control, and are attempting to re-establish a broken tradition
of experiment and creativity. Russian aesthetic modernism was actually
born in the 1860s with the withdrawal of the "Wanderer" painters from
the
Petersburg academy. Despite having to contend with Tsarist censorship, a
succession of painters, poets, composers, novelists, and, later,
filmmakers established one of the world's great avant-garde traditions,
encompassing visual and poetic constructivism, literary mystic
sectarianism, advances in cinematic montage, and other movements that,
while perhaps unfamiliar to many Westerners, are an integral part of the
world's artistic heritage. This remarkable vitality was driven
underground
by the Communist regime. In attempting to re-establish the tradition,
today's Russian artists find themselves in the contentious role once
occupied by such creators as Stravinsky, Jarry, the Dadaists, and the
painters of the Salon des Refuses. Controversy is endemic to critical
art.

Mr. Ter-Oganian does not regard himself or his work as immune from
criticism, either of the sort invited by his performances, or from
criticism that arises from unintended responses. In a democratic
society,
Orthodox believers have as legitimate a role in the discourse of art as
anyone else. But at stake is the issue of freedom itself. By demonizing
Mr. Ter-Oganian and seeking to imprison him on trumped-up charges, the
Orthodox establishment and its political allies threaten to impose a
regime of de facto censorship as rigid as that of the Soviet commissars
from which the nation and its culture have only recently escaped.
Already,
critics and journalists sympathetic to Mr. Ter-Oganian's situation have
become wary of supporting him. Many of Mr. Ter-Oganian's supporters in
Russia see his case as the most significant threat to freedom of
expression since the collapse of the Communist regime.
## CrossPoint v3.11 ##

********
The A-Infos News Service
********
COMMANDS: majo...@tao.ca
REPLIES: a-in...@tao.ca
HELP: a-inf...@tao.ca
WWW: http://www.ainfos.ca/
INFO: http://www.ainfos.ca/org

--
---------------------------------------------------
Dan Clore

The Website of Lord Weÿrdgliffe:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/9879/index.html
Welcome to the Waughters....

The Dan Clore Necronomicon Page:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/9879/necpage.htm
Because the true mysteries cannot be profaned....

"Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!"

Peter Nelson

unread,
May 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM5/29/99
to

Dan Clore wrote in message <374F2F...@columbia-center.org>...

>A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
> http://www.ainfos.ca/
> ________________________________________________
>
>Avdei Ter-Oganian
>
>By Charles Freund and Julia Volfson
>avdei_sup...@eudoramail.com
>
>We wish to bring to your attention the case of the Moscow artist Avdei
>Ter-Oganian, who is currently facing a possible prison term of up to
>four
>years for "crimes" of art. Mr. Ter-Oganian's case, in which he is pitted
>against a disturbing alliance of Russia's religious and political
>establishments, represents an important turning point in the struggle
>for
>free speech in post-Soviet Russia: Whether he is exonerated or
>imprisoned
>will have a lasting impact on free and open expression in Russia. Any
>attention that can be given to Mr. Ter-Oganian's case outside Russia is
>welcomed not only by him, but by all Russians who support the continuing
>development of a free, secular society.

Russia has never in its history had any real concept of liberty
and true pluralism. After the collapse of the Soviet Union
I was AMAZED when I heard people like Jeffrey Sachs and
other Americans entertaining the fantasy that Russia could somehow
be transformed into a liberal, open western-style society and
economy. This revealed the most unspeakable and indefensible
ignorance of Russian culture and history, which any allegedly
educated person should be embarrased to admit.

Russia is realistically a feudal culture with a veneer of industry
and technology papered over it. The concepts which form
the basis of modern American and Western European culture
- everything from political and and religious pluralism to
individual initiative and private property have no analogues
in Russian culture. When they do attempt to ape western
institutions, e.g., capitalism, they create, instead, grotesque
parodies of these institutions. In the latter case, for instance,
they were told by Soviet Authorities for 60 years that
capitalism is nothing but a form of organized crime, so
of course, that's the sort of robber-baron capitalism they
create! There's nothing in their culture or imagination which
can conceive of any other kind. Ditto with religious freedom
- they decide to enforce "religious freedom" by the state
sanctioning a handful of officially-recognized religions. Period.

In the case of this artist they apparently do the same thing.
They note for instance, that we have people like Jesse
Helms in the west, but fail to "get" that Helms and his ilk
are the parodies who have no REAL power to stop an artist
and who mainly serve as entertainment for those in the
art community rather than our foil. With the same institutionalized
seriousness that produced things like the Kremlin they
set about to ape our Helms' and Falwells but giving
them REAL power to hurt artists.

There is no hope for Russia. I don't think there's anything
anyone can do to help you.

---peter


pangloss

unread,
Jun 2, 1999, 3:00:00 AM6/2/99
to
In alt.anarchism Peter Nelson <plne...@mediaone.net> wrote:

> Russia has never in its history had any real concept of liberty
> and true pluralism. After the collapse of the Soviet Union
> I was AMAZED when I heard people like Jeffrey Sachs and
> other Americans entertaining the fantasy that Russia could somehow
> be transformed into a liberal, open western-style society and
> economy. This revealed the most unspeakable and indefensible
> ignorance of Russian culture and history, which any allegedly
> educated person should be embarrased to admit.

Jeffrey Sachs and friends (and masters) never had in mind to
transform Russia into a liberal, western-style society and economy,
although that's maybe what they _said_ . (Gives us a nice feeling
of superiority, doesn't it? )

In fact, the plan was to integrate Russia into the new world order,
prevent domestic accumulation and prepare Russia for its new role as
a supplier of raw materials, comsumers of western products, and
cheap labour -- in short, to latin-americanize it.

Which they did, successfully.

--
pangloss

0 new messages