SMArt Talks: Faking Russia: "Avant-Garde", Misconceptions, Forgeries

Srdečně Vás zveme na první přednášku jarního semestru 2025 z cyklu SMArt Talks, který pořádá Centrum pro moderní umění & teorii. Přednáška proběhne ve čtvrtek 27.02. 2025 v Knihovně Hanse Beltinga v 18:00. Naším prvním jarním přednášejícím je Konstantin Akinsha, nezávislý historik umění, kurátor a novinář specializující se na umění pocházející z oblasti dnešního Ruska a Ukrajiny. Abstrakt přednášky a bio přednášejícího naleznete níže.

27. 2. 2025

Bez popisku

Abstract

The works of Russian and Soviet modernists began attracting the attention of Western art historians and the international art market in the aftermath of World War II. During the 1950s, the first paintings by so-called "formalists"—artists whose works were banned in the Soviet Union—were smuggled into the West by diplomats and foreign journalists. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the growing influx of these illicitly exported artworks led to the establishment of the broad and often ambiguous classification known as the “Russian Avant-Garde.”

Radical modernism from both the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union soon became a powerful cultural brand, embraced by ideological groups across the spectrum. The European and American left viewed it as the authentic artistic expression of revolutionary ideals, tragically suppressed by Stalinist censorship. Meanwhile, right-wing intellectuals seized upon Soviet anti-modernist policies as evidence of artistic repression under communist rule, using them to highlight the regime’s broader suppression of freedom.

However, the clandestine origins of many of these artworks, combined with the lack of established expertise and the inaccessibility of crucial archives and museum collections behind the Iron Curtain, resulted not only in widespread misinterpretations but also in the emergence of a vast industry of forgeries. Counterfeit works flooded the international art market on both sides of the Atlantic, and many even found their way into the collections of prestigious Western museums, further complicating the already fragile discourse surrounding Russian modernism.

Given this complex and often murky history, contemporary art historians now face an urgent challenge: to critically reassess both the terminology and the historical narrative of early 20th-century radical modernism in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. Only through rigorous scholarship, comprehensive archival research, and advancements in forensic art analysis can the field untangle decades of misconceptions and expose the intricate web of authenticity, forgery, and ideological appropriation that has shaped the perception of so-called Russian Avant-Garde art over the past seventy years.


 

Bez popisku

Konstantin Akinsha is an independent art historian, curator, and journalist. He graduated from Moscow State University in 1986 and received the title of Candidate of Art History from the Research Institute of Art History (Moscow, Russia) in 1990. In 2012, he earned a Ph.D. in Art History from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.

Akinsha was awarded the George Polk Award for Cultural Reporting in 1991. From 1999 to 2000, he served as Deputy Research Director for Art and Cultural Property at the Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States.

His notable curatorial projects include Silver Age: Russian Art in Vienna (Galerie Belvedere, 2014), Russian Modernism: Cross-Currents of German and Russian Art, 1907–1917 (Neue Galerie, New York, 2015), In the Eye of the Storm: Modernism in Ukraine, 1900–1930s (Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, 2022; Ludwig Museum, Cologne, 2023; Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Brussels, 2023–2024; Austrian Gallery Belvedere, 2024; National Gallery of Slovakia, Bratislava, 2024; Royal Academy, London, 2024), The Juncture: Ukrainian Artists in Search of Modernity and Identity (Mead Art Museum, Amherst, 2024).

He is the founding director of the Avant-Garde Art Research Project (UK).

Akinsha has co-authored several books, including Operation Beutekunst (Nürnberg: Germanisches Nationalmuseum, 1995), Beautiful Loot: The Soviet Plunder of Europe’s Art Treasures (New York: Random House, 1995), AAM Guide for Provenance Research (Washington, DC: American Association of Museums, 2001).

Since the onset of Russian aggression in Ukraine, Akinsha has documented the destruction of Ukraine’s cultural heritage by Russian forces through personal blogs and articles published in The Wall Street Journal, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), and Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ).


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