Albany Times Union

Oskar Rabin, dissident artist

He defied Soviet authoritie­s in the 1960s and ’70s

- By Neil Genzlinger New York Times

Oskar Rabin, a painter who was at the center of a group of dissident artists who defied Soviet authoritie­s in the 1960s and ’70s, died Wednesday in Florence, Italy. He was 90.

Alexander Smoljanski, a filmmaker who with Evgeny Tsymbal has just completed a documentar­y about Rabin, announced the death on Facebook.

Rabin had been in Florence for an exhibition of his work at the Florentine branch of the I. Repin St. Petersburg Art Academy. It opened the day after his death.

The Russian state news agency RIA Novosti said the cause was a heart attack. Smoljanski’s Facebook post said Rabin had been under treatment at a Florentine clinic for a hip injury.

Rabin painted still lifes and landscapes, often imbuing them with wry critiques of Soviet life, but his fame rested as much on his defiance as on his artistic ability.

In 1974 he was among the organizers of an outdoor exhibition in Moscow by nonconform­ing artists — those who were denied exhibition­s in recognized galleries and museums because they refused to limit themselves to the officially sanctioned style of the day, Socialist realism, which emphasized heroic scenes and sculptures and left no room for impression­ism or abstractio­n or unpleasant subjects.

“When they gathered in an open lot on September 15,” Hedrick Smith, who was then a reporter in Moscow for The New York Times, wrote in his 1976 book “The Russians,” “they were brutally dispersed by plaincloth­es police dressed as workers and operating bulldozers and dump trucks.”

By some accounts, police had to pluck Rabin from the upper reaches of a bulldozer he had clung to as it advanced on him. The aborted art show has ever since been known as the Bulldozer Exhibition.

The internatio­nal reaction was so strong that a few months later the Soviets allowed another show by the nonconform­ing artists, but the tensions remained.

In 1978 officials encouraged him to make a trip to Paris; while he was there they stripped him of his citizenshi­p. He lived in Paris the rest of his life, even though he became celebrated in Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union.

“The Russia-themed pictures that I sometimes paint even now are not nostalgic,” he wrote in “Three Lives,” a 1986 memoir. “These are pictures-cum-recollecti­ons — just a memory about the past. For no matter what sort of past it was, you cannot erase it from your heart.”

Oskar Yakovlevic­h Rabin was born on Jan. 2, 1928, in Moscow. His parents were both doctors, and both died of illnesses when he was a boy; an orphan, he spent the years of World War II living in children’s dorms.

In 1944 he was sent to live with an aunt in Riga, Latvia. He trained at an art academy there, then studied at, but was expelled from, the Surikov Art Institute in Moscow.

It was in the mid-1950s that he fell in with a group of artists and intellectu­als who were creating artworks and writings that were outside the sanctioned parameters. By 1958 he and his wife, Valentina Kropivnits­kaya, also an artist, were living in a camp barracks near Moscow, their home a frequent gathering spot for the renegades, who became known as the Lianozovo Group.

“Its participan­ts were united not by some common artistic ideology,” art collector Alexander Glezer wrote in 1995, “but rather by their uncompromi­sing stand in the fight for freedom of expression and the right to display their works to their compatriot­s.”

Rabin’s paintings tended toward the expression­istic and were decidedly unheroic, putting him at odds with the official definition of art.

“Rabin depicted dreary everyday reality,” Natalia Kolodzei, executive director of the Kolodzei Art Foundation and an expert in the art of Russia and the former Soviet Union, said by email. “Dilapidate­d hovels, suburban slums, neglected cemeteries, religious symbols, street signs, and newspapers full of personal and narrative significan­ce.”

“Middle-aged and essentiall­y hairless, Rabin developed the incongruou­s status of a bald rock star,” John Mcphee wrote in his book “The Ransom of Russian Art” (1994).

In 1990, President Mikhail Gorbachev restored Rabin’s citizenshi­p. His works have since been exhibited many times in Russia, as well as in the West. His work is in numerous museums and has been sold at leading auction houses.

Rabin’s wife died in 2008. A son, Alexandre, died in 1994.

Kolodzei said that though Rabin’s paintings could be grim, many had a subtle ray of hope.

“Light, which plays an important spiritual role in much of Rabin’s work, can be seen as symbolizin­g the warmth of the cultural gatherings in the Rabins’ home,” she said.

The light ultimately prevailed.

Smoljanski, who worked on his documentar­y for eight years, said Rabin led by example.

“He showed us all — without any pathos or heroics — how to stay free in a country not designed for freedom,” he said on Facebook. “He never compromise­d with his persecutor­s. Never betrayed his ideals.”

 ?? Ruby Washington / The New York Times ?? Oskar Rabin, a Soviet dissident artist, at the CASE Museum of Russian Contempora­ry Art, where some of his paintings were on exhibit, in Jersey City, N.J., on Oct. 19, 1984. Rabin, a painter who was at the center of a group of dissident artists who defied the Soviet authoritie­s in the 1960s and 1970s, died on Nov. 7 in Florence, Italy. He was 90.
Ruby Washington / The New York Times Oskar Rabin, a Soviet dissident artist, at the CASE Museum of Russian Contempora­ry Art, where some of his paintings were on exhibit, in Jersey City, N.J., on Oct. 19, 1984. Rabin, a painter who was at the center of a group of dissident artists who defied the Soviet authoritie­s in the 1960s and 1970s, died on Nov. 7 in Florence, Italy. He was 90.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States