http://context.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/09/14/101.html

       
     

        

      Vladimir Filonov / MT

     
        

Remembering Yeltsin 

A public vote is underway to select a monument to the former president. 

By Tatyana Gershkovich
Published: September 14, 2007 

"For the Demolition of Bad Monuments," reads a sign on the half-full donations 
box at Moscow's Art4.ru museum. 

The note may be a joke, but the gallery does think the capital is desperate for 
good public art -- and has found a perfect opportunity to create it.

In August, Art4.ru held a competition to design the monument to controversial 
former President Boris Yeltsin, who died April 23. The museum received over 100 
submissions from professional sculptors and amateurs who wanted to commemorate 
the country's first president and express their vision of the chaotic Russia of 
the 1990s. 

The museum announced the five finalists Tuesday; they were chosen in 
conjunction with representatives from the Yeltsin Fund, including Yeltsin's 
daughter Tatyana Dyachenko. Until Oct. 11, visitors to Art4.ru and its web site 
can vote for their favorite monument. Organizers hope to erect the winner on 
Lubyanskaya Ploshchad, right in front of the headquarters of the Federal 
Security Service, where an infamous monument to Soviet security-police founder 
Felix Dzerzhinsky stood until it was demolished in 1991.

While many submissions were unimaginative, others were subtle and complex -- 
the memory of Yeltsin and his era of wild freedom proved a fertile ground for 
artistic interpretation. 

Designing such a monument is no easy task -- the president's legacy is highly 
divisive. In 1991, Yeltsin was elected president of the Russian republic, and 
after the dissolution of the Soviet Union became the first president of the 
Russian Federation. In a standoff against an opposition parliament in 1993, he 
used tanks to recapture Russia's White House. Some see him as a liberator and 
champion of democracy, while others blame him for the lawlessness of the 1990s, 
when most of Russia's national resources ended up in the hands of a small group 
of oligarchs. 

Henry Yasas, the competition coordinator, said that like many of the museum's 
ideas, the competition started as a joke, this one at the expense of prominent 
artist Zurab Tsereteli. Tsereteli designed the infamous Peter the Great 
monument near the New Tretyakov Gallery, as well as a New Jersey memorial for 
victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.



      vladimir filonov / mt
      This sculpture by Yelena Khades has Yeltsin atop a giant burger filled 
with sausages; the structure is held up by ordinary Russians.  
     
"A few days after Yeltsin died, we heard that the head of the Russian Academy 
of Arts, Zurab Tsereteli, was thinking of building a monument to Yeltsin, and 
we thought, 'He's claiming another one for himself.' We started joking about 
building our own monument and finally decided, why not do it," Yasas said. 

Yasas said the submissions can be grouped into three categories. 

"Some were just examples of bad art. They were the figurative portraits made in 
the old Soviet Realist style. We rejected these immediately. Then there were 
the bitter, sarcastic parodies, mostly from people who had fallen on back luck 
in the 1990s and wanted to blame Yeltsin. Then there were some really 
interesting pieces -- very different from each other -- that show a complicated 
picture of Yeltsin's legacy."

Rostan Tavasiyev, a finalist, sought to portray a multifaceted Yeltsin. In his 
submission, a small toy rabbit, which seemingly represents the former 
president, struggles to support a tipping column, at the top of which sits a 
porcelain vase. During the day, the column appears black, but at night it 
pulsates with colored lights. 

In his description, Tavasiyev emphasizes the ambiguity of the bunny's role in 
having set the column, perhaps the Soviet Union, off balance: "Why is the bunny 
holding the column? Because no one else will. Maybe he tipped it over or maybe 
he just happened to be near when the column started to fall." 

Other designs are explicitly triumphant, such as that by artists Mikhail Leikin 
and Maria Sumnina, who go by the name Mishmash. 

The title of their work is "The Person Who Broke Through the Wall." A red 
carpet leads to a solid red wall with a gap in it; the gap traces the figure of 
Yeltsin. "The wall is only red on one side because we want to show how Yeltsin 
broke through the wall of communism from within the red hallways of the 
Kremlin," Sumnina said. Leikin and Sumnina agreed that the 1990s were 
complicated but that Yeltsin should be praised for abandoning communism.

Many designs feature a solitary Yeltsin, or try to evoke the disorientation of 
moving from one social system to another by putting figures upside-down.

Dmitry Kavarga shows the creative confusion of the 1990s as a mass of black, 
twisted metal, with small white figurines hanging upside-down from its jagged 
edges. One figure, presumably Yeltsin, stands upright atop this mass. Kavarga's 
figurine, like Tavasiyev's rabbit, emphasizes the force Yeltsin's person had in 
a period of instability. 

The outlandish artist Andrei Bartenev also uses an upside-down figure in his 
fountain monument. 

"My monument is a retranslation of the Atlas myth. The great race of Atlases 
hold the world on their shoulders, but in my fountain the feet of the great 
Atlases hold the world," Bartenev said. "I chose feet because in the 1990s, 
everything was crazy, there were so many possibilities. It seems to me that 
movement and momentum played the most significant role in shaping Russia's 
future." 

Many contributions break with the tradition of figural likeness often used in 
Soviet monuments -- Igor Markin, a private collector and owner of Art4.ru, 
hopes to encourage Russians to embrace abstraction in works of public art. Yet 
there are portrait likenesses among the top submissions, like the works of 
Aladdin Gorunov and Yulia Gukova. Still, even in works that are less literal, 
symbols tend to be easily understandable. 

Finalist Dmitry Gutov argues that a monument to Yeltsin should reflect not only 
the 1990s but also the Soviet times that formed him. Gutov's design, two rows 
of block letters spelling out "Yeltsin," is meant to evoke what he calls "rough 
communist minimalism." 

Gutov's monument, however, has an innovative twist; it plays a recording of 
Boris Yeltsin singing a Russian folk song. "I wanted to show a multifaceted 
Yeltsin," Gutov said, "I wanted to show him as the revolutionary, the first 
Russian president and also as the tsar he grew to be in the 1990s."

At a news conference Tuesday, Markin expressed hope that whichever monument 
wins the contest will be built in the near future, though he admitted that 
getting a spot on Lubyanskaya Ploshchad is almost impossible. 

"It is more likely that the monument will go up in Yekaterinburg or in front of 
the Yeltsin Library when it is built," Markin said in an interview. 

As for Tsereteli, his spokeswoman, Irina Turayeva, explained that the artist 
has no plans to begin a monument. "Zurab Tsereteli simply suggested that after 
some time has passed, he would like to commemorate the former president."

As visitors of the museum began to survey the monuments and cast their votes, 
it became apparent that choosing one vision of an epoch of profound 
contradictions would be a difficult task. 

"I think I like the bunny best," said Yekaterina Dorozova, daughter of the head 
of the Yeltsin Fund. "There is something so touching in it. It captures how 
Russia develops in ways that are not easily comprehended." 

"Competition of Designs for a Monument to Boris Yeltsin" (Konkurs Proyektov 
Pamyatnika Borisu Yeltsinu) runs to Oct.11 at Art4.ru, located at 4 Khlynovsky 
Tupik. Metro Tverskaya. 660-1156. www.art4.ru. 

Copyright © 2007 The Moscow Times. All rights reserved. 



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