Tag: Calvert 22

  • Red Africa: exhibition explores an overlooked cultural exhange

    Soviet poster from 1920, part of the Wayland Rudd Archive. Courtesy of Yevgeniy Fiks 620
    Soviet poster from 1920, part of the Wayland Rudd Archive. Courtesy of Yevgeniy Fiks

    East London’s only gallery dedicated to contemporary Russian culture has reopened, and the inaugural season for new look space is dedicated to the legacy of cultural exchange between Africa, the Soviet Union and related countries during the 20th century.

    Red Africa will see a range of living artists’ responses to the relationships forged during this period, incorporating film, public art, propaganda and photography.

    Exhibition Things Fall Apart is the highlight of the season, drawing on film, photography, propaganda and public art to present interdisciplinary reflections on African connections to the Soviet Union and related countries.

    Taking its title from Chinua Achebe’s 1958 post-colonial novel, the exhibition reaches back to the beginning of the Soviet era through the work of Russian-American artist Yevgeniy Fiks.

    Fiks examines representations of black people in Soviet press and propaganda from as early as 1920.

    Contemporary traces of communist street art and propaganda are captured by Jo Ractliffe and Kiluanji Kia Henda, revealing the legacy of liberation struggles on the continent, while Our Africa, by filmmaker Alexander Markov, uses footage from the Russian State Film and Photo archive to expose the mechanisms behind the creation of Soviet propaganda films that sought to record the expansion of ‘glorious socialism’ across the African continent.

    Things Fall Apart – Red Africa is at Calvert 22, 22 Calvert Avenue, E2 7JP until 3 March
    calvert22.org

    Soviet poster from 1932, part of the Wayland Rudd Archive. Courtesy of Yevgeniy Fiks 620
    Soviet poster from 1932, part of the Wayland Rudd Archive. Courtesy of Yevgeniy Fiks
  • Club of Friends at Calvert 22

    Georgiy Guryanov, Evgeniy Kozlov and Timur  Novikov in Evgeniy Kozlov's flat, Galaxy Gallery, 1987
    Georgiy Guryanov, Evgeniy Kozlov and Timur Novikov in Evgeniy Kozlov’s flat, Galaxy Gallery, 1987

    Calvert 22 Gallery presents the first UK exhibition of two Russian underground movements started by the visionary artist Timur Novikov.

    In the early 1980s, during the last decade of the Soviet regime, the New Artists Group was founded and began making their wild paintings influenced by German Expressionism, Pop Art and Primitivism. First operating out of a communal flat and then an old apartment, they held a series of influential exhibitions, gigs, screenings and parties.

    Club of Friends showcases the work and life of an extraordinary generation of figures whose experiments in art, collective creative practice and sexual representation remain groundbreaking to this day.

    Works on display include textiles, film, paintings, graphics, costumes and music from extraordinary video works such as Ventslova’s highly kitsch Mireille (1995) to Timur Novikov’s flag-like fabric pieces.

    Coming to the UK for the first time, this exhibition maps the untold story of Russia in the 1980s and 1990s, showcasing two important movements that changed the face of contemporary art in Russia today.

    The exhibition is organised in collaboration with the Moscow Museum of Modern Art.

    Club of Friends is at Calvert 22, 22 Calvert Avenue, E2 7JP until 25 May.