Oleg Mavromatti - Blasphemy as Institutional Critique
ways of seeing religious offense in post-Soviet art and culture wars
Darja Filippova
Chris Burden, Trans-Fixed, 1974
Avdei Tero-Oganian, Young Non-Believer, 1998
Maurizio Catellan,
La Nona Hora, 1999
image from Danish newspaper
Flemming Rose
"They went into a church of a religion that continues to hate women; it denies us rights over our bodies. [...] It is a feminist case and it is a humanist case."
-excerpt From Pussy Riot Solidarity Rally, Chicago, 2012
Careful, Religion! (2006) BEFORE/AFTER
exhibition view.
Artwork: Alisa Zakhrevskaya.
"Do not make yourself idols." (Second image is vandalized with "Assholes.")
Oleg Mavromatti, Do Not Believe Your Eyes, 2000
Oleg Mavromatti, Ally/Foe, 2010
In our performance we dared, without the Patriarch’s blessing, to unite the visual imagery of Orthodox culture and that of protest culture, thus suggesting to smart people that Orthodox culture belongs not only to the Russian Orthodox Church, the Patriarch and Putin, that it could also ally itself with civic rebellion and the spirit of protest in Russia.
– Ekaterina Samutsevich of Pussy Riot