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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, May 12, 2021 at 2:00 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-SHERA]: Myzelev on Mihailovic, 'The Mitki and the
Art of Postmodern Protest in Russia'
To: <[email protected]>
Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Alexandar Mihailovic.  The Mitki and the Art of Postmodern Protest in
Russia.  Madison  University of Wisconsin Press, 2018.  xvii + 254
pp.  $79.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-299-31490-3.

Reviewed by Alla Myzelev (University of New York at Geneseo)
Published on H-SHERA (May, 2021)
Commissioned by Hanna Chuchvaha

_The Mitki and the Art of Postmodern Protest in Russia_, by Alexandar
Mihailovic, is a detailed analysis of the work of the group Mitki
from its inception in 1984 to its official dissolution in early 2008.
Mitki is the name of two interrelated entities: a group of several
conceptual artists and writers who were part of Leningrad's cultural
underground since the mid-1980s and a subsequent subcultural movement
that used aspects of a specific subculture that was formed by the
group. At the very core of Mitki was a reaction to the late Soviet
reality and profound disillusionment in Soviet projects and
subsequent attempts to make sense of the rapidly moving and changing
post-Soviet society after perestroika. The visual and textual
language of the group is rooted in Russian folk art and it employs
these historical references ironically. Mitki's art, writings, and
self-expression are rooted in both prerevolutionary and Soviet
Russian culture. The textual and visual works were created not only
for a Russian audience that shared the same cultural associations but
in most cases also for the small community of the artistic
avant-garde that formed in late Soviet and post-Soviet Russia.
Therefore, due to its cultural specificity, the legacy of Mitki is
difficult to interpret and analyze for an audience that does not
share the same background.

Mihailovic's volume is the first comprehensive study of Mitki in
English. Most of the interpretive work and primary sources have yet
to be translated or publicized in English or other European
languages. Taking on the task of explaining, contextualizing,
analyzing, and interpreting the body of work by Mitki was ambitious.
This book, then, deserves both praise for this ambitious undertaking
and criticism for the opportunities that are not fully realized. The
title and the introduction suggest that Mitki was an artistic group
that embodied the idea of postmodern culture in Soviet and
post-Soviet Russia and influenced further expressions of political
protests, such as the Pussy Riot group, which is discussed in the
introduction and conclusion. Indeed, in my view, the most successful
parts of the book are the introduction and conclusion, because both
attempt, to a certain extent, to place the work of Mitki within the
context of protest culture and counterculture. However, there is much
more left to be done in terms of contextualization.

The book is divided into five chapters. The first chapter deals with
the two founders of the group, Dmitrii Shagin and Vladimir Shinkarev.
The second exposes Mitki's challenge to heroic masculinity prevalent
in the Soviet Union. The third chapter analyzes the role of alcohol
and substance abuse as well as subsequent recovery from alcoholism in
the work of Mitki. The fourth concentrates on the collaboration
between Olga and Aleksandr Florenskii, the group's core members. The
author highlights the productive unity of the husband and wife and
their unlimited interests in a continual questioning of popular and
official post-Soviet culture. Finally, the last chapter discusses the
work of the artist Viktor Tikhomirov. Tikhomirov combined the
realistic approach with folk tradition and Soviet cultural heritage,
which he and other Mitki attempted to subvert.

If the goal of the book is to show Mitki as a postmodern art group,
then the book achieves its goal. It demonstrates that the group's
work was fragmentary, eclectic, occasionally haphazard, ironic, and
ultimately useless in terms of political or social change. However,
the analysis of the group is limited to a detailed discussion of its
five members only, and there are just occasional allusions to the
artistic production and ideological landscape outside and the entire
subculture that the movement created. The monograph is also missing
definitions or analyses of terms that the author uses. For example,
it is unclear what Mihailovic means by "protest," "conceptualism," or
even "counterculture." Also, more than anything the nucleus of Mitki
members was a community of like-minded artists who had created their
own dialogue in an idiosyncratic creative environment. That element
of the community as a nucleus of cultural protest has important
repercussions in Russian culture in the early twenty-first century
and continues nowadays. Yet, unfortunately, the author concentrates
on the messages of single artworks, but he does not explain why
scholars of Russian and East European art, literature, culture, and
history need to know about the movement. The movement is neither
contextualized within the underground culture of the Soviet Union of
the 1970s and 1980s nor explained as part of late Soviet
conceptualism. There is no chapter or section that explains the
group's actual work or major accomplishments. A short two-page
chronology of Mitki's exhibitions and works is hard to accept as a
fully developed history of the movement. After reading the chronology
and the book as whole, I still do not know what exactly they did and
why it is important to know about them. Therefore, it is unclear who
the intended audience of this volume is. The way it is written, even
a student with an extensive cultural background will struggle to
understand various references to Russian and Soviet culture, only a
few of which are contextualized. Moreover, there are no comparisons
between the group and similar Western or Eastern European groups,
such as Situationists International, to anchor the discussion for the
Western reader. The book then is aimed at a limited audience,
comprising highly specialized scholars and graduate students who
could recreate the narrative of cultural history that is missing
here.

While the analysis of the texts is grounded in literary theory, the
discussion of visual art, mainly prints and paintings, has no
methodological premise. The entire volume mentions only two art
historians, Liubov Gurevich and Boris Groys. Not only are larger
parts of the art historical analysis of the Russian conceptual
underground missing, but an overall analysis of the notion of
folklore in Russian and Soviet art is also not included. In the
analysis of Tikhomirov's painting _Sisters_ (_Sestry_, 1998) or _A
Woman's Lot_ (_Zhenskaia dolia_, 2006), for example, a reference to
their influence by Marc Chagall is missing. On pages 133-35, the
author discusses Olga Florenskii's collages and notes justifiably
that they show the influence of Henri Matisse, yet he does not
acknowledge the connection to the Russian avant-garde. Occasionally
Mihailovic compares the works of Mitki to Western examples; for
example, he compares the duo of Olga and Aleksandr Florenskii, who
signed their collaborative work O &amp; A, to British conceptualists
Gilbert and George. Yet, interestingly, the discussion revolves
around the use of the ampersand and the corporate nature of the name
and not the artistic production. Important issues could have been
raised. For example, the collaboration between a female and male
artist and their division of labor and choice of subject perhaps
could have been compared to the famous Russian avant-garde duo of
Aleksandr Rodchenko and Varvara Stepanova.

As the first in-depth analysis of the group's oeuvre in English, _The
Mitki and the Art of Postmodern Protest in Russia_ is an ambitious
project and an important contribution to Russian cultural history.
This monograph is important research because it outlines the major
themes of Mitki's work. However, more could have been done to
contextualize the group within the Russian conceptual movement and to
explain the transition from the Soviet to post-Soviet period of
avant-garde Soviet art. The most valuable part of the book is the
chapter on representation of substance abuse and subsequent
rehabilitation. Themes of alcohol consumption and its influence on
artistic production remain a rarely discussed issue. Another
important topic is Mitki's reevaluation of hegemonic sexuality and
their interest in creating alternative or non-hegemonic
masculinities. Mitki's challenge to normative masculinity is
especially important to analyze since the late Soviet underground had
not been "queered" by scholarship yet and most current publications
have not adapted queer theories as a lens of analysis.

Citation: Alla Myzelev. Review of Mihailovic, Alexandar, _The Mitki
and the Art of Postmodern Protest in Russia_. H-SHERA, H-Net Reviews.
May, 2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=54273

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


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