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  • Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago

    Against the Commons: A Radical History of Urban Planning

  • Donika Luzhnica & Jonas König (ed.)

    Prishtina in 53 Buildings

  • Elena Biserna (Ed)

    Walking from Scores

  • Tsvetelina Hristova, Brett Neilson and…

    Data Farms. Circuits, Labour, Territory

  • Lenka Veselá (Ed.)

    Synthetic Becoming

  • Stavros Stavrides, Penny Travlou (Eds)

    Housing as Commons. Housing Alternatives as Response to the…

  • Christiane Rösinger

    Was jetzt kommt. Christiane Rösinger. Ausgewählte Songtexte

  • Pier Vittorio Aureli, Martino Tattara

    Dogma. Living and Working

  • Baburov, Djumenton, Gutnov, Kharitonova…

    The Ideal Communist City

  • Briana J. Smith

    Free Berlin. Art, Urban Politics, and Everyday Life

  • Hg. Oliver Clemens, Jesko Fezer, Kim…

    An Architektur Archive

  • Andri Gerber, Martin Tschanz (Hg)

    Sprengkraft Raum. Architektur um 1970 von Esther und Rudolf…

  • Christian Dehli, Andrea Grolimund

    Kazuo Shinohara: The Umbrella House Project

  • Boris Groys

    Becoming an Artwork

  • DeForrest Brown, Jr.

    Assembling a Black Counter Culture

  • George Papam, Phevos Kallitsis, David…

    The Beach Machine. Making and Operating the Mediterranean…

  • Yuma Shinohara, Andreas Ruby (Hg.)

    Make Do With Now: New directions in Japanese Architecture

  • Zara Pfeifer

    ICC Berlin. Zara Pfeifer

  • Florian Heilmeyer, Sandra Hofmeister (…

    Berlin. Urbane Architektur und Alltag seit 2009

  • CuratorLab (Ed.)

    Assuming Asymmetries. Conversations on Curating Public Art…

  • Michael Rawson

    The Nature of Tomorrow. A History of the Environmental…

  • András Szántó

    Imagining the Future Museum. 21 Dialogues with Architects

  • Hiuwai Chu, Meagan Down, Nkule Mabaso,…

    CLIMATE. Our Right to Breathe

  • Patricia Ribault

    Design, Gestaltung, Formatività

  • Martina Baum, Markus Vogl (Hg.)

    Täglich. Warum wir Öffentlichkeit, öffentlichen Raum und…

  • Stuart Hyatt, Janneane Blevins &…

    Stations. Listening to the Deep Earth

  • Anne Davidian, Laurent Jeanpierre (Eds.)

    What Makes an Assembly? Stories, Experiments, and Inquiries

  • Ingo Offermanns (Ed.) Dokho Shin &…

    Graphic Design Is (...) Not Innocent: Scrutinizing Visual…

  • Silke Langenberg (Hg.)

    Upgrade: Making Things Better

  • Christiane Sauer, Mareike Stoll, Ebba…

    Architectures of Weaving

  • Wilfried Wang (Hg.)

    On the Duty and Power of Architectural Criticism

  • Christian Sander

    Claude Parent, Paul Virilio - Architecture Principe. Formen…

  • Marie-France Rafael

    Passing Images. Art in the Post-Digital Age

  • Mohsen Mostafavi (ed)

    Manfredo Tafuri. Modern Architecture in Japan

  • Material Cultures

    Material Cultures: Material Reform. Building for a Post-…

  • Leonhard Laupichler & Sophia…

    New Aesthetic 3. A Collection of Experimental and…

  • Sven Lütticken

    Art and Autonomy. A Critical Reader

  • Christian Brox (Brox+1)

    BERLIN POSSIBILITY. Rave in Ruinen. Clubkultur 1990 bis…

  • Florian Strob (Hg.)

    Architect of Letters. Reading Hilberseimer

  • Wolfgang Thöner, Florian Strob, Andreas…

    Linke Waffe Kunst. Die Kommunistische Studentenfraktion am…

  • bell hooks

    Dazugehören. Über eine Kultur der Verortung

  • Florian Idenburg, LeeAnn Suen,…

    The Office of Good Intentions. Human(s) Work

  • Peter Kiefer, Michael Zwenzner (Hg.)

    Exhibiting SoundArt

  • Jesko Fezer

    Umstrittene Methoden. Architekturdiskurse der…

  • Angelika Juppien, Richard Zemp,…

    Atlas des Dazwischenwohnens. Wohnbedürfnisse jenseits der…

  • Joerg Franzbecker, Naomi Hennig,…

    X Properties. Berliner Hefte zu Geschichte und Gegenwart…

  • Lauren Berlant

    On the Inconvenience of Other People

  • Stefano Harney, Fred Moten

    Allseits unvollkommen. Plantokratie und schwarzes Studium

  • Lucius Burckhardt

    Gerade noch gutgegangen. Fünf Jahrzehnte Planungskritik

  • Vittoria Pavesi (Hg)

    The Missing Planet. Visions and Re-Visions of Soviet Times

  • Gottfried Schnödl, Florian Sprenger

    Uexkülls Umgebungen. Umweltlehre und rechtes Denken

  • Gottfried Schnödl, Florian Sprenger

    Uexküll's Surroundings. Umwelt Theory and Right-Wing…

  • Charles L. Davis II

    Building Character.The Racial Politics of Modern…

  • Teddy Cruz, Fonna Forman

    Spatializing Justice. Building Blocks

  • Jacopo Galimberti

    Images of Class. Operaismo, Autonomia and the Visual Arts (…

  • Frida Grahn (Hg.)

    Denise Scott Brown. In Other Eyes. Portraits of an Architect

  • Dagmar Pelger

    Spatial Commons. Zur Vergemeinschaftung urbaner Räume

  • Michael Franz, Fabian Ginsberg (Hg.)

    Strategien der Aufstandsbekämpfung. Kunst

  • David Sim

    Sanfte Stadt. Planungsideen für den urbanen Alltag

  • Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

    LAVA Laboratory for Visionary Architecture. What If

  • Hannah Black

    Tuesday or September or the End

  • Adrienne Buller, Mathew Lawrence

    Owning the Future. Power and Property in the Age of Crisis

  • Sianne Ngai

    Das Niedliche und der Gimmick. Zwei ästhetische Kategorien

  • Mathias Denecke, Holger Kuhn, Milan…

    Liquidity, Flows, Circulation. The Cultural Logic of…

  • Bernard Fibicher (Hg)

    Resistance Anew: Artworks, Culture, & Democracy (…

  • Reto Geiser, Michael Kubo (Hg)

    Futures of the Architectural Exhibition.

  • Institute for Postnatural Studies

    Compost Reader

  • Benjamin Bratton

    Die Realität schlägt zurück. Politik für eine…

  • Rolf Lindner

    In einer Welt von Fremden. Eine Anthropolgie der Stadt

  • Lorenzo Fabian & Ludovico Centis

    The lake of Venice. A scenario for Venice and its lagoon

  • Peter Osborne

    Crisis as Form

  • Leslie Kern

    Gentrification Is Inevitable and Other Lies

  • Arch+ Zeitschrift für Architektur und…

    Arch+ 249. Learning Spaces

  • Ergül Cengiz, Burcu Dogramaci, Philipp…

    Exzentrische 80er: Tabea Blumenschein, Hilka Nordhausen,…

  • Omar Kasmani, Matthias Lüthjohann,…

    Nothing Personal?! Essays on Affect, Gender and Queerness

  • Sinthujan Varatharajah, Hilal Moshtari

    Englisch in Berlin. English in Berlin

  • Ina Blom

    Houses to Die In. And Other Essays on Art

  • Erik Spiekermann

    Stop Stealing Sheep & Find out how type works. 4th…

  • Luka Holmegaard

    Look

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 399. In the Design Field, Today: Thought and Practice…

  • Verena von Beckerath, Barbara Schönig (…

    Drei Zimmer, Küche, Diele, Bad. Eine Wohnung mit Optionen

  • Tresor

    Tresor: True Stories: The Early Years

  • Alexis Hyman Wolff, Achim Lengerer,…

    Berliner Hefte zu Geschichte und Gegenwart der Stadt #9. Am…

  • Philippine Hoegen (Ed.)

    In these circumstances. On collaboration, perfomativity,…

  • Emanuele Coccia

    Das Zuhause. Philosophie eines scheinbar vertrauten Ortes

  • Jeanne Gerrity, Anthony Huberman (Eds.)

    What happens between the knots? A Series of Open Questions…

  • Beatrice von Bismarck

    The Curatorial Condition

  • Dimitra Kondylatou, Milica Ivic, David…

    Architectures of Healing. Cure through Sleep, Touch, and…

  • Warren Neidich (Ed)

    An Activist Neuroaesthetics Reader

  • gestalten, ArchDaily, Rosie Flanagan,…

    The ArchDaily Guide to Good Architecture. The Now and How…

  • B. B. Jensen, H. Ibelings (eds.)

    Provocations Against Perfectionism: The Architecture of…

  • Hanka van der Voet (ed.)

    Press & Fold #2: "Resistance" (Notes on…

  • François Bonnet, Bartolomé Sanson (eds.)

    Spectres III. Ghosts in the Machine / Fantômes dans la…

  • Jack Clarke & Sami Hammana (Hg)

    The Geofinancial Lexicon

  • Kerstin Honeit, Fiona McGovern (Hg.)

    Kerstin Honeit. Voice Works Voice Strikes

  • Claudia Rankine

    On Whiteness. The Racial Imaginary Institute

  • Deutsche Wohnen & Co enteignen (Hg)

    Wie Vergesellschaftung gelingt. Zum Stand der Debatte

  • Beatriz Colomina, Ignacio G. Galán,…

    Radical Pedagogies

Red Cavalry: Creation and Power in Soviet Russia Between 1917 and 1945

Ästhetische Recherche und politisches Engagement in Sowjetrussland in den 1920er und 1930er Jahren
Red Cavalry analysiert die Verbindung zwischen ästhetischer Recherche und politischem Engagement in Sowjetrussland in den 1920er und 1930er Jahren und erklärt einige der Schlüsselmomente dieser Beziehung. Mit einer bemerkenswerten Textsammlung von Spezialisten wie Evgeny Dovrenko, Cristina Lodder, Pascal Huyn, Richard Stites, Andrei Smirnov, Vitali Shentalinski u.a. sowie mit dokumentarischem Material illustriert das Buch die Strategien, die vom Sowjetstaat angewandt wurden, um seine Ideologien über den Gebrauch einer neuen Sprache, Mythologie, Symbolik, Riten und Helden aufzuzwingen. Es erforscht den Beitrag von Autoren, Regisseuren, Musikern, Künstlern und Drehbuchautoren (die Stalin selbst als "Ingenieure der Seele" bezeichnet hat) und untersucht die aktive Teilnahme an der bolschewistischen Propaganda von einigen, die Isolation von anderen sowie die Verzweiflung von vielen.
Die Beiträge beschäftigen sich mit Themen wie revolutionärem Ikonoklasmus, der Rolle von Kultur von und für das Proletariat, Montage als Instrument die Narrative der Avantgarde auszudrücken, die Bedeutung des Maschinismus, projizierte Utopien in Futurologie und Science Fiction, neue Stadtentwicklung und neue gemeinschaftliche Formen von Beziehungen. Andere Themen werden als Schlüssel für das Verständnis der politischen und kulturellen Epoche analysiert: Film als das neue Propagandamedium par excellence; das Schicksal der Satire während der 1920er und 1930er Jahre als Spiegel der veränderten Haltung des Staates gegenüber den Möglichkeiten von Humor; neue Versuche, Kunst und Propaganda miteinander auszusöhnen; Faktografie und Fotomontage; neue Narrative in Verbindung mit den großen Projekten der Fünf-Jahres-Pläne etc.
La Casa Encendida of Obra Social Caja Madrid will host Red Cavalry: Creation and Power in Soviet Russia between 1917 and 1945 from 7 October 2011 to 15 January 2012. In addition to a major exhibition, the project will feature a series of parallel activities such as film screenings, concerts, performances and lectures.
The exhibition focuses on the period of time extending from the march of the First Cavalry Army in the Russian Civil War (1918-1921) to the intervention of the Red Cavalry in the Second World War (1941-1945). The title is also a reference to two homonymous masterpieces from the same period: the collection of short stories by Isaak Babel and the famous painting by Malevich, which opens the exhibition.
Red Cavalry offers a cultural and artistic overview of Soviet Russia in the 1920s and 1930s. In addition to exploring the collaboration—voluntary and enthusiastic in some cases, imposed and forced in others—of writers, musicians, artists, theatre directors and film-makers in the construction of socialism (its experiments, commitments and sufferings), it also analyses the cultural policies pursued by Lenin, Stalin and their inner circle.
Red Cavalry takes visitors on a journey from the artistic energy of the avant-garde that accompanied the outbreak and early days of the revolution (including its attempts and strategies to connect with the new social reality that was being forged) to Stalin’s annihilation of all creative talent at the end of the 1930s. The diverse exhibits featured in the show range from avant-garde masterpieces and some of the most significant works created in the Social Realist aesthetic, to manuscripts by the Silver Age poets Akhmatova and Mandelstam, the satires of Bulgakov and Olesha, the works of the “fellow travellers” Babel, Pasternak and Pilnyak, and the heroic novels written to extol the great achievements of the five-year plans; from experimental music to official music; and from works that reveal their authors’ cosmic ambitions to those that represent nationalism at its most recalcitrant.
The Protagonists
The protagonists of this exhibition are, among others, the poets and writers Anna Akhmatova, Osip Mandelstam, Boris Pasternak, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Mikhail Bulgakov, Yuri Olesha, Boris Pilnyak, Andrey Platonov, Velimir Khlebnikov, Daniil Kharms, Isaak Babel and Mikhail Koltsov; the artists Wassily Kandinsky, Marc Chagall, Kazimir Malevich, Aleksandr Rodchenko, El Lissitzky, Liubov Popova, Vladimir Tatlin, Pyotr Miturich, Pavel Filonov, Gustavs Klucis, Kliment Redko and the Method group artists, Vera Mukhina, Aleksandr Deineka, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, Georgy and Vladimir Stenberg, the Kukryniksy collective, Isaak Brodsky and Yuri Pimenov; the theatre directors Vsevolod Meyerhold and Aleksandr Tairov; the film-makers Dziga Vertov, Sergei Eisenstein, Grigori Aleksandrov, Vsevolod Pudovkin and Aleksandr Medvedkin; and the musicians Lev Theremin, Dmitri Shostakovich and Sergei Prokofiev.
Thanks to the recent opening of many state archives, we now know that Lenin used the determination of the avant-garde artists to his own advantage and that of his party without showing the slightest interest in either their formal experiments or their implicit and explicit postulates, and that he regarded Soviet film as the ideal medium for instruction and propaganda. Meanwhile, it has also come to light that Stalin set himself up as the supreme editor, personally participating in cultural affairs by censoring, making suggestions and, in the years of the great purges (1937-1940), personally ensuring the physical removal of all creators, from every cultural discipline, who did not toe the party line. The exhibition illustrates the strategies employed by the Soviet state to impose its ideology through a specific language, mythology, set of symbols and rites, and a new group of heroes.
The exhibition also explores a very complex period in Soviet history, characterised by enormous creative and inventive energy and profound intellectual debates whose repercussions are still felt today. This sombre reality forged by terrible personal renunciations and sacrifices is embodied in the superlative works on display by authors who, saving a few exceptions, are largely unknown to Spanish audiences.
No other country and no other time have witnessed such a concentration of creative talent as Soviet Russia during the first three decades of the 20th century. This exhibition offers a group photograph that visitors will want to return to time after time to learn more about the individual protagonists and gain a deeper understanding of an extraordinary legacy, in part yet to be discovered, which it is vital to show to new generations. In fact, the ultimate aim and raison d’être of this exhibition is to highlight the enormous talent of numerous artists from that time and their magnificent contribution to the intellectual and aesthetic debates that shaped modernity.
Red Cavalry is a multidisciplinary project. In addition to the exhibition, which will occupy every room at La Casa Encendida, there will be a series of parallel activities such as concerts, film screenings, performances and lectures. The project is an initiative of La Casa Encendida Obra Social Caja Madrid and has been organised at the request of the Spanish and Russian Ministries of Foreign Affairs as part of the official programme for the Year of Russia in Spain and Spain in Russia, held over the course of 2011. The musical events included in the project have been organised in collaboration with the Cité de la Musique in Paris.
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Rosa Ferré
Red Cavalry: Creation and Power in Soviet Russia Between 1917 and 1945
La Casa Encendida, 2011, 9788496917781