The Asian Age

Pussy Riot’s anarchisti­c art hits London

- James Pheby

London: Pussy Riot, the Russian art collective who became the nemesis of President Vladimir Putin after performing a punk protest in a cathedral, are taking their activist message to London with a new exhibition.

The 2012 stunt saw the all- female group hit the internatio­nal headlines, but resulted in two members serving two years in penal colonies, gaining them notoriety and the support of Western politician­s and mega- artists like Madonna.

London’s Saatchi Gallery is hosting artwork from the group and other Russian activists in an exhibition entitled “Art Riot”, marking the 100th anniversar­y of the country’s revolution.

Political art is as vital as ever in the country, said Pussy Riot member Maria Alyokhina at the show’s press launch ahead of its opening to the public on Thursday. “Political art is a way to change something,” Alyokhina, one of the two members jailed for the 2012 protest, said. “We didn’t expect a prison term, nor attention, you just have to do things and see what happens,” she added. “All big things were small at the beginning.” As part of the exhibition, fellow member Nadya Tolokonnik­ova has recounted her experience in the penal institutio­n through immersive theatre. Such an exhibition would not be allowed in Russia, said Alyokhina while highlighti­ng Siberian artist Vasily Slonov’s work — a pile of Lenin- era books whose spines have been sculpted into a face.

The London show, where each room is dedicated to a different artist, was organised by curator Marat Guelman. Some critics, and even allies like Putin opponent Alexei Navalny, have dismissed the group’s art as “petty crimes for the sake of publicity,”

but Guelman insisted they had missed the point. “We want to show an exhibition where the artist is important, not only the art,” he explained. “Especially when politics goes down and there is no free media, the artist has become the last free person, who speaks to government and says truth, and is not afraid.”

The reaction of Orthodox Christians to the feminist group’s performanc­e at Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was also “very important,” he said. “Some were more Orthodox than Christian, meaning ‘ we will kill this Pussy Riot because they came to the church.’ “Some parts are more Christian than Orthodox, so think there must be freedom. It was very important in helping society understand­ing itself better.”

Among the Pussy Riot works on show are videos of the group’s most controvers­ial guerilla performanc­es and giant portraits of the group’s founders in their trademark brightly- coloured balaclavas.

Other artists featured include Oleg Kulik, who lived as a “man- dog” in a belief that it embodied the period after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and Pyotr Pavlensky, who nailed his scrotum to Moscow’s Red Square in a symbolic protest.

 ?? — AFP ?? Russian political activist and member of Pussy Riot, Maria Alyokhina, poses during a press preview for the ‘ Art Riot: Post- Soviet Actionism’ and ‘ Inside Pussy Riot’ exhibition­s at Saatchi Gallery in London.
— AFP Russian political activist and member of Pussy Riot, Maria Alyokhina, poses during a press preview for the ‘ Art Riot: Post- Soviet Actionism’ and ‘ Inside Pussy Riot’ exhibition­s at Saatchi Gallery in London.

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