Fiks has created his own niche, one that is dedicated to the examination 
of the Soviet legacy. As someone left-of-center, he is intrigued by the 
experience of official Communism, both in the USSR and in the USA, the 
home of this 42-year old artist for the past twenty years.

Fiks is a mischievous sort who in some ways hearkens back to the glory 
days of Dadaism, when every work of art conveyed a bit of the spirit of 
Marcel Duchamp’s L.H.O.O.Q. that depicted the Mona Lisa with a mustache. 
Nothing expresses that more than his “Lenin for your Library?”, a 
project that involved sending copies of Lenin’s “Imperialism: The 
Highest Stage of Capitalism“ to 100 major transnational corporations 
including the Gap, Inc., Coca-Cola, General Electric, and IBM as 
donations to their corporate library. He received 35 response letters 
with 14 companies accepting the donation.

Fiks’s latest show is more somber. It deals with one of the most 
troubled legacies of the former Soviet Union that persists until this 
day, namely homophobia. In 1917 the young Soviet state decriminalized 
homosexuality. At the time the socialist movement was finally tackling 
this medieval prejudice, especially in the Weimar Republic where Magnus 
Hirschfield organized the First Congress for Sexual Reform in 1921.

full: http://louisproyect.org/2014/12/17/the-lenin-museum/
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