Ce blog a pour objectif d'évoquer des formes de création qualifiées ou considérées comme extrêmes en Russie. L'idée est non seulement de présenter l'oeuvre des artistes contemporains russes, mais plutôt de dégager les caractéristiques essentielles des rapports entre d'une part les formes artistiques et d'autre part le régime et les forces politiques de la Russie actuelle, ainsi que la réaction sur ses formes et leur rejet par la population. Vous trouverez ici mes réflexions personnelles sur le sujet, mais surtout une collection de textes, de documents et d'articles de différents auteurs qui vous permettront de comprendre mieux l'art contemporain russe dans ses controverses, mais aussi le paysage politique et social de la Russie.

dimanche 29 mai 2011

Les formes de l'art extrême et du rejet en Russie


                Pour répondre à la question « Qu’est-ce que l’art extrême en Russie ? », le premier reflexe évident et justifié est d’évoquer la tendance centrale de l’art russe des années 90 : l’actionnisme de Moscou qui était l’art de performance réalisé souvent par  des gestes violents, radicaux et provocateurs.
Parmi les actions les plus caractéristiques de ce mouvement on peut citer l’égorgement d’un cochon par Oleg Kulik au sein d’une galerie suivi par la distribution de morceaux de viande fraiche au public, ou encore sa transformation en chien qui agressait et mordait des gens, la masturbation effectuée par Alexander Brener sur la tour de plongeon de la piscine Moscou érigée à la place du cathédrale Christ-Sauveur, le défit qu’il lançait au Président Boris Eltsin en se trouvant sur l’échafaud historique sur la Place Rouge, sa défécation devant un tableau de Van-Gogh au musée des beaux arts de Moscou, le signe de dollar vert que cet artiste  a dessiné sur le tableau Suprématisme de Malevitch au musée Stedilijk à Amsterdam, le texte complet de la Constitution de la Russie que Oleg Mavromatti  écrit avec son sang etc..
Le radicalisme artistique s’inscrivait bien dans la réalité de l’époque marquée par l’absence d’institutions suite à l’effondrement de l’URSS en 1991, par une dévalorisation d’idées et de notions structurantes suite à la dénationalisation, et par la mise en évidence de « barrières culturelles » entre l’Ouest et l’Est qui persistaient malgré l’ouverture des frontières d’état. Dans cette ambiance révolutionnaire où la transgression devenait la norme dans la vie politique et quotidienne du pays, la violence, la dureté et la raideur des expressions artistiques semblaient très actuels et organiques. L’œuvre de ces artistes ne trouvait pas de réactions fortes ni chez le pouvoir qui ne les prenait pas au sérieux faute du système institutionnel qui pourrait donner du poids à leurs actions, ni chez le public désorienté par la dévalorisation d’anciennes normes éthiques, esthétiques, morales et idéologiques. La voix des critiques peu nombreux restait  très faible faute du système de médias développé. Par contre, les actions de ces artistes en Occident, considérées comme des actes de vandalisme ou d’offense, ont provoqué des scandales et même des procédures judiciaires.  
Dans les années 2000, les formes extrêmes propres à l’actionnisme ne sont plus d’actualité en Russie. En revanche, ce sont les réactions qui sont paradoxalement devenues plus violentes et agressives. Il est devenu dangereux pour les artistes de s’exprimer sur certains sujets, surtout ceux liés à la religion orthodoxe ou aux idées nationalistes.
Le premier artiste qui était poursuivi pour « Incitation à la haine et atteinte à la dignité humaine », c’était Avdeï Ter-Oganian, actuellement refugié politique à Prague, suite à sa performance où il brisait des reproductions d’icônes à la foire « Art-Manège » en 1998. Il a ouvert une longue liste de procès judiciaires contre des artistes (Oleg Mavromatti – refugié en Bulgarie), galeristes (Marat Guelman) et commissaires d’expositions (Youri Samodourov, Andreï Erofeïev pour les expositions Attention : Réligion ! et Art interdit 2006), ainsi que d’agressions physiques d’artistes (Kirill Miller, Igor Bystrov, Oleg Yanushevski, Marat Guelman), de ravages d’expositions et des vandalisassions d’œuvres. Les auteurs de ces réactions sont des membres d’associations réactionnaires proches de l’église orthodoxe russe ou d’ultranationalistes.
Je crois que la scène de l’art contemporain russe présente de « bons » exemples qui permettent de voir et de comprendre comment la notion de l’extrême dans l’art peut varier en fonction des conditions historiques et politiques ou du degré des réactions.

dimanche 22 mai 2011

VOINA ART GROUP

Innovation Award 2010
Posted by: Joera Mulders on April 11, 2011 -
Art Group Voina’s phallus on the Liteiny bridge opposite to St. Petersburg FSB headquarters has been awarded the Innovation 2010 price for best visual work of art. Many RussiaWatchers are inclined to interpret the award as a sign of further liberalization. Some of the more exalted reactions make me think that Voina’s dick could even be the ‘One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich’ of Medvedev’s thaw. Others question the merit of Voina’s performances and their underlying morality. All the more reason to take a closer look. Who are these people who call their art group ‘War’?


From left to right: Leonid 'crazy Lyonya' Nikolayev, Oleg 'thief' Vorotnikov with his child Kasper and mother Natalia 'goat' Sokol
The most interesting source on art group Voina I found is written by Russkii Reporter journalist Marina Akhmedova, who invited eight members of Voina’s core group into her house.  The interview, in fact a transcription of a heated philosophical discussion between Voina’s leader Oleg ‘thief’ Vorotnikov, his wife Natalia ‘goat’ Sokol, Leonid ‘crazy Lyonya’ Nikolayev and journalist Marina Akhmedova, is a great example of Russkii Reporters engaging journalism. Several parts of interview will make up the core of this post. The original article in RR is called “‘War’ and peace, why contemporary artists are so malicious”.

Voina’s performances

Before exploring the more philosophical questions about the merit of art, activism and morality, let us have a brief look at some of Voina’s performances, as compiled by RR.
August 24th 2007 -- Banquet

The art group conducted a funeral repast for the poet Dmitri Prigov in the Moscow metro (Soviet dissident and leader of the conceptual art school started in the 1960s ) They set up a festive dinner table in the middle of the last car.  Earlier the dean of the philosophy faculty at the Moscow State University refused permission for a joint action of Voina and Prigov in the student hostel, soon after which the poet died.
February 29th 2008 -- Fu*k for Your Heir the Bear Cub!

Three days before the presidential election of 2008 the group organized an orgy in the State Biological Museum. According to the ideologue of the group, Plutser-Sarno: Everyone fucks each other and the cub bear (Medvedev) looks at it with disgust. I personally prefer the explanation by Oleg Vorotnikov as recorded by Kommersant in the video report above. I paraphrase ‘If people are deprived from a political choice, their activity moves from their brain into a lower part of their body’. In other words, the absence of political freedom makes us into animals.
May 6th 2008 -- Cop humiliation in his own domain

The group visited a police office in the village Bolshevo in the Moscow oblast, hung a portrait of president Medvedev on the bars of the holding cell and build a human pyramid in front if it. The second part of the performance involved bursting into a police office, decorating the wall with a new portrait from the recently elected Medvedev and bringing along the cake to celebrate.
May 22th 2008 -- Censorship
In the building of the Tagansk inter-regional procurator office, where a session was held in the case against the curator of the exhibition ‘Forbidden art 2006’, Andrey Erofeyev, the activists of Voina organized a collective chanting of the slogan ‘Art critics don’t wear robes!’
July 3th 2008 --  Cop in a priest robe

Oleg Vorotnikov dressed himself in the uniform of an employee of the Ministry of Internal affairs with a priest’s robe on top and visited a supermarket, where he filled five plastic bags with the most expensive products and demonstratively carried them past the cash desk, without paying.
September 7th 2008 -  In memory of the Decemberists
‘Voina’ decided to present Yuri Luzhkov with a present for the Day of the city. In the electronics department of an Auchan hypermarket, activists of the group hung five people from the ceiling: Three immigrant workers and two gays.
November 7th 2008 -- Attack on the White House

In the night before the anniversary of the revolution, the assault brigade of the art group broke into the territory surrounding the House of the Federal Government and installed a laser to display a skull and bones on the facade covering 12 floors of the building. After the laser was activated they escaped through the fence and went into hiding.
May 29th 2009 -- All cops are bastard dogs

The artistic team of the art group appeared at the session of the Tagansk regional court in the case of the organizers of the  exhibition ‘Forbidden art 2006’. Musicians took off the covers of their instruments and began to perform the song ‘All cops are bastard dogs. Never forget it.’
May 22d 2010 -- Crazy Lyonya ‘roofs’ the federals
With a blue bucket on his head, Lyonya jumped on an official car of the State Protection Service with emergence lightning, which was waiting for a traffic light on the embankment next to the Kremlin. Lyonya walked over the roof of the car and managed to escape the officers coming after him. The blue bucket movement has denied their involvement in the performance.
June 14th 2010 -- Dick captured by the FSB

In 23 seconds the groups activists painted a huge phallus on the Liteiny bridge in St. Petersburg. When the bridge was opened, the painting appeared right in front of the FSB headquarters. Two fire trucks were called in to clean the bridge, but without much success.
September 16th 2010 -- Palace revolution

During the night in St. Petersburg the activists of ‘Voina’ turned several police cars up side. Some of the cars contained people. The aim of the performance was to show how to conduct true reform of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Preliminary observations

The Eroveyev connection

At least two observations need to be made. Firstly, the Voina group has at least twice come out in support for the case of of the organizers of the exhibition ‘Forbidden Art’, who stood trail after complaints were made by the Russian Orthodox community. One of the organizers on trial, Andrey Erofeyev, was part of the seven person jury that awarded the innovation 2010 award to Voina.

Radicalization, prison and support

Secondly, although it is not possible to discern a linear process of radicalization in the above mentioned performances, it is fair to conclude that the last performance called ‘Palace Revolution’, was the most radical performance to date and that this performance did cross the line of legality by flipping over over police cars, in some cases with officers inside. The groups ideologue Pultser-Sarno had fled to Estonia prior to the performance.
After this performance two members of the group, Vorotnikov and crazy Lyonya spent three months in pretrial detention, which could be considered a harsh measure. The standard punishment for hooliganism is after all 15 days of prison time. The 7 years demanded by the procurator office are absurd and may have influenced the jury to come out on support of the art group. British artist Banksy is reported to have paid bail for the Voina group members. Art group Voina has now become a cause célèbre.
Note that the interview with Russkii Reporter was taken a few days after Vorotnikov and Nikolayev got out, which could partly explain their zeal and anger.

The interview

Contemporary art: What is it?

One of the most heard criticisms of the decision to award Voina with a price is the question related to the artistic merit of their performances. Is it truly art or more of a juvenile prank? Russkii Reporter Marina Akhmedova does a great job provoking the provocateurs and counterposing their ideas to those of herself, which I assume many of her readers can relate to. What follows is the first part of the interview. The first person is Marina Akhmedova.
Contemporary art is no longer art. I wiggle on my chair restlessly.
Compared to contemporary Russian journalism, which finds itself in someone’s ass, contemporary art must be flourishing, Vorotnikov reacts spiteful.
Art for me is something that can be made only by one in a million people, I say. My words are met by disdainful chuckling from the side of the activists.
That is not what art is about, goat says softly.
A painted dick. Is that art?
You talk about elitist art, Vorotnikov says and because of his tone I sense that it offended him. But that contradicts the very foundation of contemporary art, which is about transmitting the idea, that everyone can do it.
We always conduct our performances in such way, that others may repeat them, the voice of goat adds.
People tell us that they did the same things when they were young and drunk. Why are only some considered artists, while in fact everyone is an artist.
That’s not it, I interrupt. To be an artist is a gift.
Nonsense.  You have a limited view of culture. You say ‘one in a million ‘, ‘culture needs to be protected’, ‘ locked inside a museum’, Vorotnikov begins to orate. Those last two phrases I did not use.  ‘Cul-ture is -- made by e-ve-ry-one, e-ve-ry-one, he makes me understand, clearly thinking that his stretched words have more chance to enter my corked up ears.
Culture, but not art, I say with pathos.
Art is the front line of culture.
When I watch van Gogh’s starry night, I feel myself reborn, I say with even more pathos. And when I watch, forgive me, your penis, I feel nothing.
You belong to a bygone era. Out of pity, we will not throw you on the scrap-heap, Vorotnikov snaps, and I thank him for his kindness.
A little later Vorotnikov says:
Journalists should understand that culture is something that is created by all of us. Art is the quintessence of culture, like poetry is the quintessence of language. Art formulates that, which culture will later implement in each little corner of society. Like philosophy provides a conceptual device or rather the possibility to create a conceptual device in each individual field of science, so does art also create the most general, the most standard of things.

Call for action

The simplicity and vulgarity of Voina’s performances deliberately counterpose elitist art. They wish to make art for the people in order to transform culture and society. In this sense they do see themselves as a vanguard. Not an elitist vanguard of course, but a vanguard of the common people. I cannot help to think of the similarities with the Bolshevik revolution.  As Sean Guillory commented on Facebook: ‘a young Mayakovsky would be proud’.
Vorotnikov: The intelligentsia of today are the people, who are fighting with the police, who each day partake in actions, who burn cars and cash machines.

We paint a situation of civic action. Many say that they would gladly join the protesters, if they didn’t have to work, if they didn’t have a family, if they didn’t want to eat.
We show such a person that he shouldn’t say such nonsense. When you don’t wish to join us, go and procure your food in the big city. Everything is cramped with food. Go and eat! But don’t tell us that you can’t come to a meeting at 8 o’ clock in the evening.

Shop lifting as a method of civic resistance

At the start of the interview one of the group members offers to share a bag of pelmeni, which they say was stolen from a supermarket nearby. Journalist Akhmedova is clearly uncomfortable with this. Their disagreements will lead to a discussion about morality, but let us first look at the rationale behind Voina’s call to steal.
Shop lifting under the current system of wealth distribution is not only not a crime, but not even something disgraceful, Vorotnikov answers. Shop lifting is a method of civic resistance.
“So go out and steal!” Vorotnikov gives me instructions. And your money you should give to those who cannot work; the homeless, the crippled and disabled children.
We do work! The group says in chorus. Around the clock, no weekends and we do not accept money for our work. We only steal out of need, ‘goat’ says quietly. The money we give away. She doesn’t tell whom they give their money to, but I understand it must be the unfortunate.
We’re often told that ‘if we steal, others pay for us’. That’s why we call upon everyone to steal.
The fascists are the enemy
Stealing is presented a form of protest against a prevailing materialistic worldview. The ‘enemy’ is referred to as liberals (in the economic sense) and fascists. For art group Voina the fascists are people who put their own material needs before the well being of others.
Yes, when I earned that money, it’ is my right to use it. [Marina Akhmedova, says]
And you are surprised , when we call you a fascist? You are a liberal and liberals are today’s fascists.
You are perverted by money, Vorotnikov says and I feel the urge to burst out laughing. You are a pervert. You know people are dying, children …
A counterculture to the state
For Voina, the embodiment of that materialistic worldview is the (fascist) state, the system which draws borders and ‘barred windows’ between people and material items like food. Let me call it a strategy of ‘divide and rule’, which Voina aims to counter by saying to hell with those borders, just take whatever you need and share it. Marina Akhmedova disagrees. As a journalist she wants to believe that she can change the system from within.
Vorotnikov: You are simply immersed inside the state. But when you don’t like the state, you don’t have to be part of it, you need to create an alternative.
Akhmedova: But what if I do like the state.
As a rule, people that say that they like everything, they are simply enduring. And when you talk to them, they understand that they do not like everything, goat says. They don’t like that bread costs more than 5 copecks and that public transport is expensive and getting more expensive each month. People are not happy with these things. You look different at these things, because you have your salary.
If you wish to correct the system, then there are other methods for that, I say. And don’t take offense, but those methods that you use, evoke only rejection. It’s hooliganism and that’s it.
Only fascists reject our methods.
Do you read the comments on your performances on the internet?
Those are fascist comments
But, they are people, who write them. People, whom you call fascists and to whom you say to hell with you!
They can’t be helped, Vorotnikov says gloomy.

And I [Marina Akhemdova] tell you that love and hate don’t go hand in hand.  You cannot hate people and try to help them at the same time.
We don’t hate anyone.
Well, you just said so. And you managed to sling a pile of unpleasant things at me.
You are disrespectful to people, who cannot work themselves.
I don’t respect you, who can work. And what concerns disabled children. the state is obliged to help them. Not me.
The word state evokes another round of laughs and chuckles.
The state is an obsolete form, Vorotnikov says. It’s no longer needed. It only exists thanks to ‘Russian reporters’ like you [stab at the journalists magazine]  and media in general]. The state impedes on us with its barred windows.

More than anarchism?

Akhmedova wants to find out if besides breaking down structures, the art group has an alternative to offer. If stealing is allowed, what about murder? And what if there would be no state, how would society deal with murderers?
Akhmedova: And what should we then do with murderers?
Vorotnikov: Do you propose to keep them in prison?
What do you propose?
We thought of this for a long time. All our ideas are liberal. That can be, because these are such times and the people have endured a lot of cruelty. We don’t need a sea of blood. We think that a murderer should be banished to an island.
Well, on an island there is nature, fish, sea.
To simply lock someone up in a prison is meaningless. A prison will only strengthen one’s worldview. While in prison, I worked on my worldview and got through the time.
But you will agree that prison time isn’t pleasant. I hope it won’t happen to you again, I say, hinting at Oleg’s and Lyonya’s recent time spent in pretrial detention.
There are simply different approaches, Lyonya adds his voice. We don’t believe in the necessity to punish a person.

But, there are no alternatives to prisons, I say.

When we don’t want a sea of blood, there are no alternatives to the island.
Personally, I am for revenge, Vorotnikov says. When someone wants to take revenge, go ahead.
And when there will be no revenge?
We don’t need the state as a punitive power separated from society.
Okay, but who will punish? Otherwise murders will freely roam over the streets carrying axes. I just can’t get the image of Raskolnikov out of my head. Perhaps, because our interview so strongly resembles the conversation between Porfiry Petrovich [the detective from crime and punishment] and Raskolnikov about special people having the right to commit crimes.  Let us think of a happy country, I propose, where the state fulfills its function, it serves the people and doesn’t turn them, the people in its servant.
The state is a prison and doesn’t fulfill any sort of function at all, Vorotnikov answers. What don’t you like about our plan for an island? Is it that on an island criminals would not be punished as much as in prison.
Yes, that is exactly what I don’t like about it.
That means that you are a sadist fascist woman! Vorotnikov says with fervor.
When someone has killed, that person should be sent to prison immediately, I confirm my sadism.
They should be relocated to an island, where murder is permitted, goat says.
But that is even more cruel, I note.
When I am not prepared to kill, then I should banish that person, Vorotnikov says.

What should we think of Voina?


Oleg Vorotnikov during a court session
Personally, I would describe art group Voina as a phenomenal exponent of Russia’s counterculture, mixing the revolutionary zeal of the Bolshevik revolution with contemporary dissatisfaction with a powerful, but ineffective and often unfair state. Russia’s swift and ruthless shift to capitalism and the materialism and individualism that comes with it should not be discarded either as the undercurrents shaping their worldview. And to add a bit of a pot shot. There is also trace of that messianic sectarianism, which is not typically Russian, but without denial a recurrent trend in Russian history.
It’s very important that this counterculture finds the room to breath. When suppressed or ignored it may only get more radical and destructive. In this sense the decision to award the innovation is commendable and even groundbreaking. You could call it a public endorsement of pluralism.
At the same time, I can also understand people like journalist Akhmedova, who find it difficult to agree with their choice of methods and the ‘bright future’ they wish to accomplish. I love at least half of their performances, but I confess to be somewhat shocked by their worldview as expressed in the interview. While Voina opposes elitism, they have created a self-image of a revolutionary artist, which exempts them from the moral implications of their actions. Is this what contemporary art is about? I doubt it.

Social and political dimensions

Another article written a few months before the innovation price was awarded sums it up pretty well:
‘Voina’ is phenomenal because they cause irritation even among the people who sympathize with the traditional performance artists. The group deliberately crossed the borders of both the artistic community and the protest movement. Contemporary art gladly uses political motives, but even in its most radical forms does not allow the departure from the realm of artistic expressions. Political activists on the other hand demand clear and unequivocal slogans. ‘Voina‘ defies the rules of both communities. The groups performances thereby eliminate of the borders between these two isolated spheres.
The members of the group accuse contemporary artists of hypocrisy and complaisance, and since they do not hold back in their expressions, they have caused many  discussions within the art community. Should the art community support this group which is ideologically so different from us?
By now we know that the art community, or at least the jury of the Innovation price, has come out in support of Voina. But let’s be fair. In 2010 there just wasn’t an visual art performance, which got as much public attention as Voina’s penis. All questions about aesthetics, morality and legality aside, the jury would have simply discredited themselves and the award had they picked another performance.
I am sure someone may dive into correspondence between the Ministry of Culture, whose approval is officially required to select the jury, and the National Museum of Contemporary Art and find proof of political interference or the relative lack thereof. I will only note that by decree of the Ministry Eroveyev, the curator not long ago persecuted and convicted for hurting the feelings of Orthodox believers, was included in the jury. If the authorities really intended to hold the cultural community in an stranglehold, he wouldn’t have been there in the first place.
I am however not so interested in whether that particular glass is half full or half empty. The decisive force in the decision to award the innovation price to Voina has clearly been the public and the media, which just loved the defiance represented by Voina’s phallus sticking it up against the FSB headquarters.
Comparisons between Khrushchev’s thaw and Medvedev’s presidency are exemplary, but we should not forget that Russia today is fundamentally different from the Soviet Union in the 1960s. What we see today is not the appeasement of the people with cultural liberties, it’s a cultural rejuvination. The public and foremost the younger, internet generation is in charge.
Let us therefore not equate the award for Voina’s phallus with the publication of Solzhenitsyn’s  ‘One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich’. In the time to come Russia’s cultural rejuvenation will have much more to offer than the painting of a dick.
Please, what would our grandchildren’s children think of us?

dimanche 8 mai 2011

Oleg Mavromatti

Oleg Mavromatti, de la crucifixion à la chaise électrique

Publié le 2 décembre 2010 à 4:00
En Russie, l’« action » artistique n’est pas seulement une forme d’expression extrême, c’est aussi une forme d’extrémisme. Et même un acte qui peut tomber sous le coup de la loi. Article 282, alinéa 6, du Code pénal : « incitation à la haine ou à l’hostilité entre nationalités, races ou religions ».
Oleg Mavromatti, performeur et cinéaste, membre de nombreux groupes actionnistes tel Ultrafuturo, en sait quelque chose. Il y a 10 ans, il s’est vu poursuivre sous ce chef d’accusation pour s’être soumis à une crucifixion expérimentale mais bien réelle, cloué à sa croix des heures durant, cette inscription dans le dos : « Je ne suis pas le fils de Dieu ».
Aux dires de l’artiste, il s’agissait d’une scène du film « Toile/Huile » qu’il était en train de tourner, intitulée « N’en crois pas tes yeux ». Ce 1er avril 2000, l’équipe de tournage, munie d’une autorisation en bonne et due forme, travaillait à l’abri des regards indiscrets dans l’enceinte de l’Institut de culturologie. Mais par malheur, des journalistes de NTV introduits sur les lieux par un membre de l’équipe ont saisi l’occasion pour faire du « chaud ». Après avoir interviewé le crucifié, ils se sont empressés de diffuser le reportage, se gardant bien de préciser qu’il s’agissait d’une scène d’un film. C’est ainsi que la scène est devenue pour le grand public une des « actions » les plus provocatrices de l’histoire de l’actionnisme.
Un malheur n’arrivant jamais seul, des voisins de l’Institut qui n’étaient autres que des membres de la paroisse orthodoxe « Nicola na Bersenievke », en voyant le reportage, n’en ont en effet pas cru leurs yeux. Ils ont porté plainte auprès du Parquet de Moscou. L’affaire a finalement atterri à la section des « enquêtes sur les crimes religieux » du Parquet général. L’artiste, invité à un festival de cinéma en Bulgarie, aurait alors reçu le conseil explicite, de la bouche du juge d’instruction Iouriï Krylov de « s’y rendre et, si possible, de ne pas revenir ».
Dont acte. Mavromatti a suivi les traces d’Avdeï Ter-Oganian, peintre et actionniste exilé pour des raisons analogues en Tchéquie en 1999, où il a reçu le statut de réfugié en 2002. Il se trouve toujours aujourd’hui en Bulgarie. Le renouvellement de son passeport international russe lui ayant été refusé, il n’a pu obtenir la régularisation de sa situation auprès des autorités et est exposé à une procédure d’extradition qui le conduirait tout droit dans les geôles russes, en attendant son procès. Ce qui veut dire, affirme-t-il, à la mort : souffrant d’un ulcère, il ne supporterait pas les conditions de détention.
Confronté à cette situation sans issue, l’artiste a trouvé une alternative au suicide : toute la semaine du 7 au 13 novembre, tous les internautes de la planète étaient invités à assister chaque soir à son show on-line interactif « Svoï/
Tchoujoï », « Nôtre/Etranger » – « exécution publique populaire ». Et à participer à un vote à l’enjeu capital : pour ou contre l’exécution de l’artiste. Pour l’occasion, Oleg est descendu de sa croix pour s’installer dans une… chaise électrique de fabrication maison. Le décompte des voix cumulées était effectué tous les jours, et l’artiste, en cas de vote défavorable à 2 contre 1, devait recevoir une décharge de 600 000 volts d’une seconde, puis 2, puis… 7, jusqu’à ce que mort s’ensuive.
Le Courrier de Russie s’est entretenu par Skype avec Oleg Mavromatti, trois jours après le rendu du verdict populaire qui mettait fin à l’expérience : non-coupable, donc.
Le Courrier de Russie : Dans quel contexte le projet Svoï/Tchoujoï a-t-il pris forme, qu’est-ce qui vous a conduit à ce geste ?
Oleg Mavromatti : Le projet est né du fait qu’en Russie les artistes sont poursuivis de plus en plus souvent sur le fondement de l’article 282. Son application à la culture se généralise. Il a été porté par des démocrates convaincus, dont d’anciens dissidents. Mais comme toute arme, il a deux faces : il peut être utilisé à des fins soit pacifiques, soit militaires. Si la Russie était un pays vraiment démocratique, il pourrait fonctionner comme il le doit. Mais comme c’est un pays fascizoïde, la plupart des procès sont initiés par des gens ouvertement fascistes, comme l’Union des porte-étendard orthodoxes, qui agit avec la bénédiction de fait de l’Eglise orthodoxe¹.
Je me suis décidé à organiser ce projet parce que beaucoup de gens ne savent pas ce qui se passe, en raison de la vitrine glamour que présente le pays au monde. J’ai mis en place une procédure qui raccourcit la distance entre l’accusé et l’accusateur, et créé une situation où les gens pouvaient me châtier sans délai, pour tester les réactions. Les gens avec qui j’ai discuté le projet au stade de sa conception s’attendaient à une vague de votes en faveur de mon exécution. Mais les individus fascisants dont je parle, rusés et paranoïaques, n’ont pratiquement pas participé, m’adressant à la place une lettre m’enjoignant de me soumettre à un vrai tribunal. Ce résultat n’en est pas moins parlant, et permet de soulever le problème publiquement.
LCDR : Et quelles conclusions tirez-vous de l’expérience ?
O. M. : Vous savez que mon expérience était basée sur celle de Milgram [cette célèbre expérience de psychologie réalisée par l’américain Stanley Milgram en 1960 visait à évaluer le degré de soumission d'un sujet à une autorité jugée légitime lui intimant d’exécuter un ordre contraire à ses principes, en l’occurrence d’envoyer des décharges électriques à des « patients » incarnés en réalité par des acteurs, ndlr]. La grande différence, c’est que mon auditoire était beaucoup plus large. Il représentait un grand nombre de groupes et couches sociaux différents, teenagers et vieux, riches et pauvres, croyants ou non, et mettait en présence des groupes qui ne se croisent pas en général dans la vie. De plus, il n’y avait pas de motivation matérielle, comme dans l’expérience de Milgram, où les participants étaient rémunérés. Pas d’autre que ma mort, ou ma vie.
Au début il y avait des restrictions. Les votants devaient rendre compte de leur motivation. Mais ensuite nous avons décidé de compter tous les votes, même ceux qui n’étaient motivés que par trois points de suspension, car il y avait derrière chaque vote une personne concrète dotée d’une opinion. Et pour que tous soient absolument égaux, nous avons aussi annulé la clause de paiement pour les votes négatifs.
LCDR : Les 800 euros que vous auriez gagnés et dont vous auriez fait don à un refuge pour les chats, c’est un mythe ?
O. M. : Oui. C’est les journalistes qui ont fait leur propre calcul, en fonction du nombre de votes [soit 1600 fois 50 centimes d’euro, ndlr].
LCDR : Et le résultat final, alors ?
O. M. : En fait, je n’ai pas fermé le site bien que l’expérience soit terminée. Je trouve très bien que les gens continuent à s’exprimer sur la question que j’ai soulevée. Et du coup ils continuent à voter. Je regarde… Il y a toujours deux fois plus de voix pour la non-culpabilité que pour la culpabilité, soit 3265 contre 1617 [le 16 novembre au soir, ndlr].
LCDR : Si le vote avait été différent, vous seriez resté assis dans la chaise ?
O. M. : Oui. Je suis un artiste honnête, mes actions précédentes le prouvent. La crucifixion exécutée pour le film présentait également un danger mortel. J’ai volontairement utilisé des clous non désinfectés, trouvés dans la rue. Un mois durant, je suis resté entre la vie et la mort. Entre la septicémie et le tétanos, les médecins étaient horrifiés.
LCDR : Vous dites que les groupes fascisants comme les Nachi ou l’Union des porte-étendard orthodoxes utilisent les mêmes méthodes que les artistes actionnistes, même s’ils ne veulent pas le savoir. Pouvez-vous développer cette idée ?
O. M. : Les stratégies sont très proches, quand par exemple l’Union proteste contre les théories de Darwin en enterrant un singe [une poupée, ndlr]. Mais il ne s’agit même pas de propagande pour la religion chrétienne, ce sont plutôt des fous militarisés. Ils ne sont pas forcément utilisables par le pouvoir, et d’ailleurs un activiste de l’organisation est tombé sous le coup de l’article 282.
En définitive, le pouvoir joue le rôle de Dieu le père quand il intervient pour punir l’un ou l’autre groupe d’actionnistes en concurrence. Ce jeu est une forme de vaccination de l’Etat contre toute éventualité de révolution : l’introduction d’une bactérie vivante permet de stimuler le système immunitaire, qui produit les moyens de combattre le véritable virus.
LCDR : Pensez-vous que votre show peut déclencher un mouvement de soutien, une pression internationale pour empêcher votre extradition de Bulgarie, ou votre mise en cellule immédiate à votre arrivée en Russie ?
O. M. : Je ne crois pas, non. Mais je vais prolonger l’expérience du show, de la télétransmission en direct, sans chaise électrique. Le point le plus positif, c’est que j’ai découvert que les thèmes que j’ai abordés toute la semaine intéressent beaucoup de gens, pas seulement des individus mais aussi des groupes d’activistes. Je ne sais pas encore comment utiliser cette ressource, mais je sais qu’il n’existe aucun autre moyen de la mobiliser de façon aussi massive.
  • Propos recueillis par Simon Roblin

dimanche 1 mai 2011

Oleg Mavromatti

Culture and Art, Internet, Russia

16.11.2010 15:54
The Internet users bestowed life upon artist Oleg Mavromatti. Photo from website grani.ru
The Internet users bestowed life upon artist Oleg Mavromatti. Photo from website grani.ru

Internet users did not allow Oleg Mavromatti to die

Russian artist Oleg Mavromatti, who was forced to emigrate to Bulgaria, where he obtained a political refugee status, announced the end of his Internet performance "Friend-or-Foe".

The thing is that Mavromatti is persecuted by the church and the state for (anti)religious and other beliefs. In addition, a criminal case had been initiated under Article 282 of the Criminal Code (inciting national, racial or religious hatred). In 2000, he had another performance called "Do not believe your eyes". The artist was nailed to the cross and had the words "I am not the son of God" carved on his back.

While doing this, Oleg Mavromatti said that, in any case, he was not going to hurt the religious feelings of people. Even vice versa, his performance reflected his spiritual search and was a test of faith for endurance.

In the summer of 2010, Mavromatti's travel passport expired. When he started the formalities to receive a new Russian passport and to obtain documents for further stay in Bulgaria, he encountered new problems. Then Mavromatti organized this project.

With his performance 'Friend-or-Foe', Mavromatti invited the Internet users to decide whether he should live or die. With each excess of "guilty" votes, the artist, sitting in the electric chair, was hit by a discharge. The fifth discharge would have become the last blow to him.

The voting lasted from November 7 to 14. According to the users, Mavromatti was innocent. However, he said, the project will be continued on TV.

"I want to say 'thank you immensely' to everyone who voted for his innocence, but also 'thank you' to those who did vote at all! The F/F Project is over, but the F/F project on TV will go on, I am sure, without chairs or electricity", wrote the artist in his blog under the title of 'Friends have won'.

dimanche 17 avril 2011

Oleg Mavromatti

STRANGE BUT TRUE

Russian artist puts his life at stake in online vote

03:32 07/11/2010
A Russian artist, charged with inciting religious hatred, will launch an online vote on Sunday in which users are to decide whether he should live or die.
Oleg Mavromatti fled to Bulgaria in 2000, shortly after charges of inciting religious hatred were filed against him for the "Do not Believe Your Eyes" performance, in which he was crucified.
The artist said he had since heard repeated calls for his execution and decided to give his foes a chance.
"As soon as an artist makes a radical move, he is immediately told that he deserves a punishment, with some even speaking of a death penalty. So I decided to give those people a chance to punish the "guilty" artist, whom they dislike so much," Mavromatti said.
"Let's see how ready they are to go ahead with the execution. I have no doubts that they would do it and I want to show that the humanity is not as humane as it thinks of itself," he added.
The on-line performance, headlined Ally / Foe, would take place daily since November 7 and last a week. Mavromatti would be tied to an electric chair, programmed to make five electric shocks, each more powerful than the previous. The fifth shock will be a fatal one.
According to the project's website, svoichuzoi.org, a total of 100 votes are required for the first 600000V shock, lasting 0.5 seconds, and 1,000 for the second, lasting 1.5 seconds. Further details have not been disclosed.
Mavromatti's critics accused the artist of blackmail, saying that he is simply trying to get a new Russian foreign passport instead of an expired one and avoid extradition to Russia, where he faces from three to five years in prison.
The artist, who claimed in the media that Interpol would soon come after him, denied the accusations.
"The performance is not aimed at demanding passport, visa, mercy, compassion, asylum and so on. This project is pure sociology, though with a bit of radicalism. I just want to conduct an opinion poll, just like any normal sociological study does. That's all," he said.

MOSCOW, November 7 (RIA Novosti)