Yevgeniy Fiks: “Communist Party USA Commemorative Stamps” (Online Gallery)
GALLERY | BIO | SHOWS | PUBLICATIONS | ARTIST’S STATEMENT
ARTMargins is pleased to present a new work by New York City-based artist Yevgeniy Fiks: Communist Party USA Commemorative Stamps (2007-2008). In this project, Fiks produced US postal stamps featuring portraits of former leaders of the American CommunistParty, such as John Reed, William Z. Foster, Benjamin Davis. For seven months the artist then used these stamps on the envelopes in which he sent his monthly payments to companies such as CITI, Verizon, T-mobile, Time Warner Cable, and others. In this project, the procedure of paying monthly bills – a crucial ritual in the capitalist world order — becomes a ritual commemorating the repressed legacy of the American Communist movement, which has been almost totally erased from American collective memory.
Yevgeniy Fiks, “Communist Party USA Commemorative Stamps,” installation detail, 2007-2008
Born in Moscow
Lives and works in New York
2009 | The Song of Russia, Galerie Blue Square, Paris |
2008 | Communist Guide to New York City, Barnard College, New York |
2008 | Adopt Lenin, Winkleman Gallery, New York |
2008 | Reading Lenin with Corporations (in collaboration with K. Hansen, O. Kopenkina, and A. Lerman), PS 122 Gallery, New York |
2008 | Monitoring Lenin’s Sales on Amazon.com, Contemporary City Foundation, Moscow |
2008 | Communist Guide to New York City, Common Room 2, New York (catalog) |
2007 | Communist Party USA, Marat Guelman Gallery, Moscow |
2007 | Lenin for Your Library? Lenin Museo, Tampere |
2006 | Lenin for Your Library? State Museum of Russian Political History (1st St. Petersburg Biennale of Contemporary Art), St. Petersburg |
2006 | Lenin-by-mail, Krasnoyarsk Museum Center, Krasnoyarsk |
2005 | The Song of Russia, ARTStrelka Projects, Moscow |
2009 | Ultra New Materiality, (3rd Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art), Moscow (upcoming) |
2009 | Things Fall Apart, Winkleman Gallery, New York |
2008 | Metro Poles, Art in Action, Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning, New York |
2008 | Subjective Events, Sometimes Recorded, Art Laboratory Berlin, Berlin |
2008 | In Transition, National Center for Contemporary Art, Yekaterinburg; National Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2008 | Tina B: The Prague Contemporary Art Festival, Prague (catalog) |
2008 | 16th Biennale of Sydney, Sydney (catalog) |
2008 | 1st Moscow International Biennale for Young Art, National Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2008 | L’impresa dell’arte (The Enterprise of Art), PAN | Palazzo delle Arti Napoli, Napoli (catalog) |
2008 | Properly Past, Rotunda Gallery, Brooklyn |
2007 | Artist as Activist Festival, Tokyo |
2007 | VII Krasnoyarsk Museum Biennale, Krasnoyarsk Museum Center, Krasnoyarsk (catalog) |
2007 | 1st Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art, International Workshop of Young Artists, The Archeological Museum, Thessaloniki (catalog) |
2007 | Critically in Between, “Art Athens” Art Fair, Helexpo, Athens (catalog) |
2007 | The Return of Memory: New Art from Russia, Art Museum Kumu, Tallinn |
2007 | Progressive Nostalgia: Contemporary Art from the Former USSR, Centro per l’arte contemporanea Luigi Pecci, Prato (catalog) |
2007 | 9000 km (traveling project of the National Center for Contemporary Art), Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2007 | Witnesses to the Impossible (2nd Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art), Moscow Center for the Arts, Moscow (catalog) |
2007 | Left Pop (Bringing It Back Home) (2nd Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art), Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2007 | Petroliana (2nd Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art), Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2007 | Partners in Crime, Gallery MC, New York (catalog) |
2006 | 9000 km (traveling project of the National Center for Contemporary Art), European University in St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg (1st St. Petersburg Biennale of Contemporary Art); Kemerovo University Exhibition Hall, Kemerovo |
2006 | XI Moscow International Forum of Art Initiatives, Novy Manezh, Moscow (catalog) |
2006 | Contested Spaces in Post-Soviet Art, Sydney Mishkin Gallery at Baruch College, New York |
2006 | The Studio Visit, Exit Art, New York |
2006 | Outsourced: Contemporary Russian Art, Current Gallery, Baltimore |
2005 | Artist & Arms, Mar’s Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2005 | Russia Redux #1, Schroeder Romero, New York |
2005 | Enemy Image, Momenta Art, New York |
2005 | X Moscow International Forum of Art Initiatives, Novy Manezh, Moscow (catalog) |
2005 | VI Krasnoyarsk Museum Biennale, Krasnoyarsk Museum Center, Krasnoyarsk (catalog) |
2005 | Post-Diasporas: Voyages and Missions (1st Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art), Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow (catalog) |
2005 | Bring in the Clones, VertexList, New York |
2004 | The Presidency, Exit Art, New York |
2004 | Crude Oil Paintings, White Columns, New York (traveled to Akus Gallery at Eastern Connecticut State University, Connecticut) (catalog) |
2004 | ArtKliazma Festival 2004, Kliazma Reservoir Resort, Moscow (catalog) |
2003 | Artist & Arms, National Center for Contemporary Art, Kaliningrad |
2003 | ArtKliazma Festival 2003, Kliazma Reservoir Resort, Moscow (catalog) |
2003 | D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival 2003, New York |
2002 | Brewster Project 2003, A Site-specific Contemporary Art Event, Brewster, New York |
2000 | Digital DUMBO, Mastel+Mastel Gallery, New York |
1996 | E-europe, The Bronx River Art Center, New York |
1996 | Soho Arts Festival 96, 420 West Broadway, New York |
1996 | Inverted Perspective, Eight Floor Gallery, New York (catalog) |
1995 | Art in the Anchorage 95, BrooklynBridge Anchorage Museum, New York |
Philipe Dagen, “The Song of Russia,” Le Monde, Saturday-Sunday, 8-9 February 2009 |
Sydney J. Beveridge “De-fetishizing Lenin Kitsch,” Thing Theory, February 3, 2009Lori Cole, ARTFORUM on-line Critics’ Picks, January 26, 2009 |
Michael Harvey, “Yevgeniy Fiks,” Art in America, January 2009 |
Paddy Johnson, “Yevgeniy Fiks at Winkleman Gallery,” artfagcity.com, October 2, 2008 |
Catherine Spaeth, “All in One Day: The Gallery Give-Away in ChangingEconomies,” catherinesarttours.blogspot.com, September 29, 2008 |
Daniel Larkin, “The Russian Soldier,” ArtCal Zine, September 19, 2008 |
Colby Chamberlain, ARTFORUM on-line Critics’ Picks, September 2008 |
Yaelle Amir , “Lenin Re-Commodified,” ArtSlant New York, September 2008 |
Linda Park, “Future without Utopia”, ARTmargins, July 2008 |
Olga Kopenkina and Yevgeniy Fiks, “Legally Soviet: A Conversation,” Rethinking Marxism, July 2008 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Communist History, Unclassified,” Afterimage, May/June 2008Ilya Budraitskis, “America’s “Other”, Moscow Art Magazine, #67/68, May 2008 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Introducing Yevgeniy Fiks”, Modern Painters, May 2008 |
Pernilla Holmes, “Blast from the Past,” ARTnews, January 2008 |
Editorial, “Little-Read Book,” Harper’s, January 2008 |
Ilya Budraitskis, “Communist Party USA: Interview with Yevgeniy Fiks”, vpered.org.ru, November 2007 |
Yulia Tikhonova, “Communists with a Human Face”, Political Journal, ? 30 (173), October 2007 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Solitude of Collectivity”, Documenta 12 Magazines Online Journal, June 2007 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Corporate Face Off” in Lenin for Your Library? from Ante Projects, June 2007 |
Anna Malpas, “The Party Never Stopped”, The Moscow Times, June 8, 2007 |
Alexey Yuriev, “Communism Is Dead. But Communists Are Alive”, Moscow News, June 1, 2007 |
Editorial, “Thoroughly Modern Moscow”, Financial Times, March 5, 2007 |
Antti Lahde, “Maistuuko Lenin McDonald’sille?” Aamulehti, February 1, 2007 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Introducing… Yevgeniy Fiks”, NYFA Current, February 2007 |
Santtu Palm, “Lenin Matkasi Sahkopostissa Museonsa Seinalle,” Tori, January 24, 2007 |
Yulia Tikhonova, “In Conversation with Yevgeniy Fiks”, ARTmargins, January 2007 |
Cindy Stockton Moore, “Lenin, Libraries, and Legacies: An Interview with Yevgeniy Fiks”, ducts.org, # 18, Winter 2007 |
Exhibition Reportage, TV Channel “Russia”, September 7, 2006 |
Georgiy Litichevskiy, “Utopicheskoe Pervorodstvo”, Moscow Art Magazine, #61/62, May 2006 |
Olga Kopenkina, “Odinochestvo Kollektivizma”, Moscow Art Magazine, #61/62, May 2006 |
Anastasiya Mitushina, “Songs of Russia”, ARTmargins, May 2006 |
Yuliya Rakhimkulova, “21st Century Leniniana”, Vecherniy Krasnoyarsk, April 19, 2006 |
Dena Shottenkirk, “Art and Politics: Russia Redux”, ARTmargins, January 2006 |
Diana Baldon, ARTFORUM on-line Critics’ Picks, January 2006 |
“Svobodnoie Vremya”, Domashniy Channel TV, January 13, 2006 |
“Sots Realism Made in USA…”, gif.ru, December 22, 2005 |
Nick Stillman, “Samoderzhavnie Sandvichi V Chernobolskoi Zone”, Moscow Art Magazine, #60, December 2005 |
Interview, Kultura TV Channel, December 24, 2005 |
Isabelle Dupuis, “Russia Redux /Schroeder Romero Gallery”, NY Arts, November 2005 |
Holland Cotter, “Enemy Image”, New York Times, October 7, 2005 |
Eduard Rusakov,”Khudozhniki Muzeichikov Pobedili?” Krasnoyarskiy Rabochiy, July 6, 2005 |
Interview, Siberian TV Network, June 2005 |
John Kelsey, “Russian Front: The Moscow Biennale”, ARTFORUM, April 2005 |
Anastasiya Mitushina, “Bon Voyage!”, Moscow Art Magazine, #57, April 2005 |
Joyce Man, “Dark Diasporas”, The Moscow Times, February 18, 2005 |
Irina Kulik, “Feminists and Immigrants at the Museum on Petrovka”, Kommersant, February 4, 2005 |
Elena Sorokina, “The Art of Protest in American Galleries”, JungeKunst, #61, January-March 2005 |
Interview, NTV Network, November 2004 |
Inga Melnikova, “War on a Tray”, Chelyabinskiy Rabochiy, July 14, 2004 |
My work is inspired by the collapse of the Soviet bloc, which led me to the realization of the necessity to reexamine the Soviet experience in the context of the history of the Left, including that of the international Communist movement. My work is a reaction to the collective amnesia in within the post-Soviet space over the last decade, on the one hand, and the repression of the histories of the American Left in the US, on the other. I’ve been interested in discovering and reflecting on repressed micro-historical narratives that highlight the complex relationships between social histories of the West and Russia in the 20th century. Having grown up and having been educated in the Soviet Union in the 1980s, my work is about coming to terms with the Soviet experience by carving out a space for critique both without and within the Soviet experience. Having lived in New York since 1994, I’m particularly interested in the history of the American Communist movement and the way it manifests itself in the present-day United States. My work has been influenced by the writings of Susan Buck-Morss about discovering sites of the “post-Soviet condition” in today’s US and the effects of the Cold War on present-day American society and culture, and I am interested in the activist use of that legacy.
The reexamination of Soviet history in my work is very closely connected to my understanding of the position of the post-Soviet artist as one who is committed to and responsible for the formation of a proper understanding of Soviet history. An overwhelming sense of denial of Soviet history as a way of dealing with (post-) Soviet trauma is one of the most striking symptoms of the post-Soviet condition. While pre-Revolutionary history is being discussed at length and with much interest in the countries of the former Eastern bloc, Soviet history is almost totally repressed. As the last ten years have shown, however, this repression and denial have not served the post-Soviet subject well. Reclaiming an active engagement with Soviet history is a more effective way of dealing with post-Soviet trauma. I am in no way suggesting that the post-Soviet artist should have a rosy or nostalgic view of Soviet times or that s/he should affirm the excesses of that period. The post-Soviet artist should also be careful to avoid the exploitation and commodification of the Soviet past. I’m advocating quite the opposite, a critical kind of nostalgia whereby the work of memory becomes a tool for exposing and identifying the discrepancies of both the past and the present. Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism” was important to developing my ideas in this respect.
Taking responsibility for one’s history means regaining critical agency towards and within that history. Soviet history should be viewed as much as a site of intervention as current post-Soviet physical reality. Interventionist tactics normally applied to physical social space can and should be effectively applied to history. As far as my work is concerned, approaching history through interventionist tactics means uncovering and exposing repressed histories and scrutinizing the generally accepted official historical narratives. I view activism within the discipline of history as the formation of a parallel or alternative base of knowledge whose formation begins with the collection of radical historical data.
Within the context of contemporary Russian art, my work addresses issues pertinent to the critique of post-Soviet identity politics. I often depart from historical research and I approach these issues by means of analytical, conceptual, or interventionist tactics. I have been consistently interested in areas such as the “post-Soviet condition,” 20th-century Russian history, Soviet-American relations and the Cold War, the history of the international Communist movement, and the Communist legacy in the West today. Over the last several years, my projects have included works that use a descriptive research-based approach (in such projects as “Communist Guide to New York City” and “Communist Party USA”), as well as more directly interventionist strategies concerning the Communist legacy, as in a project entitled “Lenin for Your Library?”