On Thursday, April 4 at 7 PM, world-renowned artist Vitaly Komar
will give a presentation entitled "My Experience as an Artist in
Russia and the West" in Althouse 106. The lecture is free and open
to all.
During the late 60s and early 70s in Moscow, Vitaly Komar &
Alexander Melamid founded the Sots Art movement, a unique version
of Soviet Pop and Conceptual Art, which combines the principles of
Dadaism and Socialist Realism. In 1973, they were expelled
from the Soviet Artist Union and in 1974 they were arrested
during a performance and their works destroyed by Soviet
authorities. By 1978, Komar & Melamid were living in New York.
They continued developing Sots Art through the 1980s, being the
first Russian artists to receive funding from the National
Endowment for the Arts. They devoted their projects in the 1990s to
iconoclasm, democracy, elitism, and ecology. Komar's work with
Melamid has appeared at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the MOMA,
the Walker Art Center, Brooklyn Museum, and the Louvre, among other
places. On their collaboration: "Even if only one of us creates
some of the projects and works, we usually sign them together. We
are not just an artist, we are a movement" (from artist's
statement). Since 2003, Komar has been working independently on New
Symbolism, an art movement that "works toward restoring a sundered
connection between art and certain historical and timeless
myths."
A print of Komar's, Air Superiority (pictured), is
currently on display in the Trout Gallery:

Vitaly Komar
Air Superiority, 2005
Serigraph on paper