Spotlight on Igor Savitsky: The Legend

At a young age, I read the book “կայծեր (Sparks)” by Raffi, one of the legendary Armenian novelists. The novel was about young Armenian revolutionaries standing up and fighting for their rights. The chosen title name is very appropriate: when the hammer hits hot metal, it creates sparks. Those sparks were the revolutionary men standing up for what they believed in and pursuing it. 

 Without a doubt, the same can be said about avant-garde and non-conformist art under totalitarian rule. Under the pressures and limitations of totalitarian art arises legendary artists who create abstract visual commentaries that reflect upon on their lives and capture what is in their souls.

Just as Hitler attempted to silence abstract artists through humiliation (recall “Entartete Kunst [Degenerate Art]” and physically destroying artworks, the Soviet government silenced artists who strayed away from the USSR’s officially and only acceptable art style, Socialist Realism.

USSR, however, did not always silence artists. For the first decade, before the official decree of Socialist Realism, avant-garde artists, such as Alexander Rodchenko were dedicated to the USSR while having the freedom to explore avant-garde art. 

The early twentieth century brought many social and political changes to Russia. The Russian Revolution of 1917, led by the Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin, promised a utopian egalitarian state with a Socialist government. The new Russian state promised social, political, and economic equality to the working class by overthrowing a previously bourgeois and hierarchical political system. As a newly emerged government that concentrated on the welfare and needs of the lower classes, it was inevitable that they also needed to recreate Russian culture to suite the needs of the general public. They attempted to restructure the arts with two specific goals. Art, which was once specifically reserved for the upper class, was made available for the enjoyment and use of the masses. Second, art was seen as a propaganda tool, convincing people to believe in the heroism of the Soviet government and leaders. Introduced in the 1920s and officially decreed in 1934, the newly emerged Soviet government introduced Socialist Realism as the sole official genre of art and literature. The Soviet Union expected art to depict Soviet reality in its dialectical qualities. For instance, the depiction of the triumphs of the working class and the process to get to the Revolution were primary subjects of artworks. Socialist Realism may have depicted what was real, which was the triumph of the working class over the upper class, but it did not depict the truth of Soviet life; the truth of Soviet life was poverty, hunger, and depression.

 

Boris Vladimirski, Roses for Stalin, 1949, oil on canvas

Socialist Realism was a method of idealizing reality and bending the truth to fit the needs of the Soviet government. Socialist Realism, although carefully chosen by the well educated and elite, was supposedly to emphasize the traditionalist tastes of the masses, returning art to classical techniques that attempted to represent reality “accurately.” With such traditional notions in mind, Socialist Realism was specifically aimed at painting.

Avant-garde and abstraction is far from reality, particularly the idealized reality that the USSR was demanding from artists. Artists who strayed away from Socialist Realism were condemned, exiled, tortured, or watched all their artworks burn to the ground.

One man, however, helped stop that. One man sent by the gods of avant-garde art attempted to save these artworks from such a tragic end. That man was Igor Savitsky. If the artist is going to be exiled and face inevitable death, then why not save their works?  

Igor Savitsky is a fascinating figure in the history of Communist Art. Born in 1915 in Kiev, Igor Savitsky was the child of a quite wealthy family. During the October Revolution, Savitsky’s family was targeted and thus he hid his identity by “transforming” into a proletariat. He had always been interested in art, and created some artworks of his own. However, his artworks received heavy criticisms, and he eventually gave up painting altogether when he became the director of the Karakalpak Museum. However, he never lost his appreciation and love for avant-garde art, even though it was the works of others.

Savitsky began collecting millions of Russian and Central Asian avant-garde works and saving them in the deserts of Uzbekistan. Eventually, this desert oasis became an actual museum (Karakalpak Museum), housing over 90,000 artworks and various textiles, jewelry, and artifacts of Central Asian cultures. By convincing Soviet authorities that Karakalpakstan needed an art museum, he was given the funding and the position of founding director of the cultural institution.

However, art and heat do not mix well together. Thus, Savitsky single handedly tried to maintain his collected artworks, eventually leading to his own death. Imagine; working to preserve these artworks so tirelessly it became the reason for all your health issues. Even then, Savitsky did not stop his work. In the Moscow hospital were he spent the last days of his life, Savitsky continued his research and writings on art for the Karakalpak Museum. 

Savitsky is a gem, an angel sent by the art gods to help preserve culture that was on the verge of extermination. 

Hitler’s rejection from the art conservatory drove him to torture millions of people; Savitsky’s led him to save critical artworks of the underground Soviet avant-garde artists, even if they cost him his life. 

I’m thankful for people like Savitsky; without him and other like-minded individuals, the world would not know about all the timeless avant-garde pieces that were created during the Soviet era.  

If you’re interested in learning more about Igor Savitsky, I recommend watching the Desert of Forbidden Art by Amanda Pope, who happens to be a Professor of production at USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. I own the documentary myself, and I can honestly say it’s one of my favorite documentaries out there.

The Cruelest Month: Arshile Gorky

“April is the cruelest month, breeding/ Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing/ Memory and desire, stirring/ Dull roots with spring rain.” – T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land

As Genocide Awareness month, for at least once a year we are united to remember the deaths of 1.5 million ancestors and the displacement of the rest. April is the cruelest month, but it does breed lilacs our of dead land. Out of April’s ashes rose a magnificent culture of Armenian art, music, and literature. 

Arshile Gorky. Possibly the most well known Armenian artist in the Diaspora of the twentieth century. Gorky was born Vostanik Manuk Adoian in Khorgom of Lake Van. At the age of four, in 1908, his father emigrated to America in order to avoid the draft. In 1915, Gorky, his mother, and three sisters fled their village. In 1918, Gorky’s beloved mother died from starvation in the capital of Russian-controlled Armenia, Yerevan. At the age of 16, in 1920, Gorky emigrated to America to live with his father.  The atrocities experienced during the Genocide, as well as the tragic death of his mother, carried on with Gorky through the rest of his life and were reflected in his artwork.

After arriving in America, he changed his name in order to reinvent his identity. By the end of his life, Gorky was claiming that he was related to the writer Maxim Gorky, although there is no relation aside from his chosen last name. 

Gorky’s most well-known painting, The Artist and His Mother, (1926-1936), is a rendition of the very last photograph he had taken with his mother. There are so few portraits in this world which I believe to have a powerful aura. Amongst the portraits of Alberto Giacometti, Johaness Vermeer, and similar artists, I would have to say that this portrait is absolutely captivating. In the eyes of young Gorky are deep despair, yet in the eyes of the mother is a pride in her homeland, her heritage, and a will to stay strong for the children she must raise alone in a war-torn land. As opposed to the history and the drama of the photograph, the color choices are soft and hazy. To me, the soft colors are a representation of the last piece of a long gone memory. 

Portrait of Artist and Mother, Photograph

Arshile Gorky, Portrait of Artist and Mother, 1926-1936

However, note that the hands are erased, as well as the flowers of his mother’s dress and in his hand. Gorky has eliminated any piece of positivity that could have altered the depiction of their deeper, psychological distress. There is something very discomforting about the absence of hands. They are not covered with black paint, a color often related to death and mourning. Instead they are white, the color of purity and peace. White-erased hands, and distressed faces…

 

Born in April, 1904, yet reborn as an Artist in 1915. Gorky is the symbolic beacon of hope that carried on by Genocide survivors through the twentieth century, and transformed into a cultural hero for the current generation, as well as generations yet to come.

 

In the midst of marches, vigils, and candle-lightings, let us all remember Gorky and the millions of others who left us. They left this world in pleas, but they produced and contributed to a culture that we should be proud of. We should pass along a culture of artists, musicians, and writers to the generations of Armenians yet to come. 

April is the cruelest month, breeding

Lilacs out of the dead land…

 

 

Staring Back: Giacometti’s Sickly Figures

I’m very sick today. Unfortunately, I’ve stayed home all day without a will to do anything. In the midst of all the sniffles and sneezes and reliving my childhood by watching thirteen year old Degrassi episodes (those good ol’ days!), I found myself thinking about Giacometti’s artworks…again. 

 

What is it about Giacometti that absolutely drives me insane?

Let me make a list:

  1. His sculptures
  2. His paintings
  3. His life
  4. His models talking about how psychotic he is in the studio
  5. He may or may not resemble my favorite Armenian poet, Paruyr Sevak (images below)

And the list goes on and on…

Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966)

Paruyr Sevak (1924-1971)

 

I think it’s safe to say that Giacometti is in my top 5 of greatest artists that ever lived! 

I actually wrote an essay on Giacometti’s use of space and void in his post World War II sculptures. You can read it here. [ps. I love this journal because it is the inaugural edition of the Art History Department’s journal and my friends wrote some amazing pieces for it too!] Yes, that was me shamelessly advertising our writings…

Back to Giacometti.

I closed my eyes and remembered LACMA’s collection of Giacometti’s sculptures. Now, LACMA does not allow photographs, because they do not own the collection (bummer); however, you can search “Giacometti LACMA” in Google and you’ll be able to see exactly what I mean [some awesomely sneaky people took pics!].

In my opinion, it is a very beautifully curated room. I’ve seen one of Giacometti’s sculptures in Norton Simon and MOCA as well, but I find LACMA’s choice to group them all on a “stage” is such an interesting display choice. [On a side note, I should mention this is clever because Giacometti had an obsession with stages and the theatre.] 

When we go to a museum, we observe artworks. We stare at them, with the knowledge and comfort that these objects have absolutely no way of responding to us. Even though the Mona Lisa and other like works, who’s eyes always follow the viewer, seems to stare back, she’s still framed off by the traditional use of a frame. Giacometti’s sculptures in LACMA are framed off as well, but they’re grouped on a stage, as if they were real figures or body parts petrified in that moment. No longer are we watching them; they are watching us

A. Giacometti, Large Seated Woman (Annette), 1958, Bronze, Sculpture, LACMA

 I can enter that room thousands of times, but I will never feel comfortable enough to view Giacometti’s anorexic figures as I would viewing Brancusi’s Bird in Space. But I must clarify that I find myself pleasantly uncomfortable; I keep going back to that room because I welcome this uncanny feeling.

 

C. Brancusi, Bird in Space, 1928, Bronze, Sculpture, MOMA

We enter gallery spaces, view art, critique them, and leave feeling quasi-cultured and somewhat satisfied. Giacometti’s sculptures don’t allow that; they critique us, as if to say, “Who are you to enter my space and judge how a mastermind has chosen to depict me?” This makes me think twice about how I look at art. Of course, a lot has to do with the curatorial decision to place the sculptures on an elevated stage, but it’s the vision of Giacometti that the curators are helping convey. Giacometti’s thin, sickly figures tear into my soul and completely take over my thoughts.

 

A. Giacometti, Tall Figure II and Tall Figure III, 1960, Bronze, Sculpture, MOCA

Every time I’m on that same second floor of the Ahmanson building in LACMA, I stop in that room and watch them and I welcome the cold and uncanny stares of Giacometti’s figures. Once I’m done with my spiritual meeting with Giacometti’s work, I finally feel free to move on to the next artist on my list at LACMA, Rothko…

Challenge: Marina Abramovic

I was introduced to Marina Abramovic’s work about two years ago. I’ve always appreciated her art, but for the past two weeks, her performances are all that I think about! I might just be writing my next paper on her…

Marina Abramovic is a Serbian-born performance artist who began her career in the 1970s. She challenges gender and societal norms, the boundaries of artist-audience relationships, the body, and the mind.

I recently watched a video of her speaking about her 1974 performance, Rhythm 0. She placed various objects on a table, from pleasurable objects, such as roses and honey, to violent and pain inflicting ones, such as knives and scissors. In fact, she even placed a gun with a single bullet on the table, to see how far the audience could take this experimental performance. There was a sign stating that the audience has the freedom to do whatever they’d like to her and they will not be responsible for their actions for the duration of the performance (6 hours). 

 

At first, people were gentle. Eventually, the audience began testing Abramovic’s determination. People began cutting her clothes, slicing her throat and drinking her blood. One man even held the gun to her, waiting for her to move away. She did not. 

Abramovic gave up control over herself to the audience. It took a while, but some did abuse the power she gave up. Some remained gentle, but others easily forgot to treat her with modesty when she handed them power. After six hours of abuse, Abramovic stood up and walked out, yet the violent audience ran off to avoid confrontation. How cowardly! 

Viewing an artwork is often a passive experience. In most cases, the artwork or performer is caged off from the audience. Breaking that barrier between the audience and the art is still such an uncanny experience that as viewers we do not know how to react. She’s not only testing the audience’s limits, but challenging the traditional notions of an audience-artist relationship. 

If given the opportunity, how will you react to a powerless human being? 

Step One, Redone

So I decided to switch over my blog to WordPress, and I decided to bring over everything, including my first introductory blog:

Before I begin posting my thoughts and observations, maybe I should introduce myself…

Hi! My name is Ani. I’m born and raised in Los Angeles, the city where art can be found both in and out of museums. I’m a student studying Art History and the Culture of New Technology. I love reading, writing, and discussing art and technology [and don’t even get me started on the clash of art and tech!]. Although I love all time periods in art history, my absolute favorite is twentieth century art, especially Soviet Socialist Realism and the Avant-Garde in the USSR! Marked by cruel Totalitarian governments, World Wars, oppression, and economic instability, the twentieth century yielded tortured souls who produced thousands of magnificent artworks.

But aside from all that art talk, I like spending my free time at museums, hiking, doing yoga, binge watching Netflix shows, and wine/beer paired with books, music, or friends. Sometimes I wish I had a pet! But a girl can dream…and blog!

So, why Untitled? Right before I created this blog, I was looking through an art book and I stopped at Mark Rothko’s Untitled (1960-1961). As a modern art history student/enthusiast, it’s impossible not to come across at least a dozen Untitled artworks in one book. Of course, his artworks are sublime! However this was the first time I was so fascinated by that word. UNTITLED. Oh, the irony. With so many Untitled artworks, they’re often distinguished with names or dates in parentheses. Yet, the artwork is Untitled. UNTITLED. It’s just echoing in my head now. I wonder if it’s echoing in yours now. UNTITLED.