Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 12 – Alisa Prudnikova,
curator for art from the regions at the Moscow State Center for Contemporary
Art, has taken the lead in promoting exhibits of artists from beyond the ring
road and insists that calling anyone from the regions “provincial” is simply “dumb.”
In an interview with Vedomosti
on the occasion of a new exhibit at the Manezh, the curator says she wants to
promote dialogue between artists in the metropolitan center and artists outside
it on the basis of equality rather than having the former adopt a position of superiority
and the latter one of inferiority (vedomosti.ru/lifestyle/characters/2020/09/11/839525-slovo-regioni).
Since 2017, Prudnikova has styled
herself “commissar of Non-Moscow,” her way of saying that she represents an
artistic world at least as diverse and interesting as that in the capital and
has promoted exhibits both in the center and in the regions intended to ensure
that both groups understand that state of affairs.
She says that sociological surveys
of those who have visited these exhibits over the past few years show a transformation
in views, with visitors from Moscow no longer viewing art from the regions as
provincial and inferior and those from the regions no longer denigrating
themselves and viewing Moscow as inherently and inevitably superior.
Indeed, she says, many visitors have
changed their basic observation from the old one that “in the provinces nothing
is happening” to a very different one, “and in Moscow nothing is happening
either.” Her new exhibit, “Non-Moscow is Not Beyond the Mountains,” is
reinforcing that shift of opinion.
And she concludes that regardless of
whether people are in Moscow or in the regions, they can view themselves
simultaneously as central as peripheral relative to others. Muscovites may
still view artists from the regions as provincial, but Muscovites are
provincial when compared to their counterparts in Paris or New York.
Understanding that, the commissar of
Non-Moscow says, helps both to escape from the traps in which all too many have
been trapped for all too long.
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