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Komar and Melamid

Komar and Melamid (pronunciation: Kómar and Melamíd) is a tandem team of Russian-born American conceptualist artists Vitaly Komar (born 1943) and Alexander Melamid (born 1945). In an artists' statement they said that "even if only one of us creates some of the projects and works, we usually sign them together. We are not just an artist, we are a movement." Both artists were born in Moscow, but emigrated to Israel in 1977 and subsequently to New York in 1978. The pair's co-authorship of works ceased in 2003–2004.[1]

Education Edit

Komar and Melamid attended the Moscow Art School from 1958 to 1960, followed by the Stroganov Institute of Art and Design (Illustration dept.), graduating in 1967. They began working together shortly thereafter. After 36 years they separated in 2003.

History Edit

Komar & Melamid's first joint exhibition, Retrospectivism, was held at the Blue Bird Cafe in Moscow, 1967. The following year, they joined the youth section of the Moscow Union of Artists and began teaching art. In 1972, Komar & Melamid founded a movement they called Sots Art, a unique version of Soviet Pop and Conceptual Art that combines the principles of Dadaism and Socialist Realism." In 1974, they were arrested during a performance (in a Moscow apartment) of Art Belongs to the People. Later that year, their Double Self-Portrait (similar to dual portraits of Lenin and Stalin) was destroyed by the Soviet government, along with works by other nonconformist artists, at what became known as the Bulldozer Exhibition (because bulldozers were used to destroy the artwork, which had been displayed in an open-air setting).

In 1976, Komar & Melamid's work became more widely known. Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, hosted their first international exhibition, but Soviet authorities denied them permission to attend. In 1976, they also made their first attempt at emigrating, but permission was denied. In response, they created their own country, "Trans-State," complete with passports and a constitution. In 1977, they received permission to join relatives in Israel. In 1978, they moved to New York; in the same month, their first museum exhibition opened at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut.

Throughout the 1970s, Komar & Melamid also worked in a style they called "Post-Art," pioneering the use of multi-stylistic images, prefiguring the eclectic combination of styles in post-modernism, which became popular in the 1980s. They collaborated on various conceptual projects, ranging from painting and performance to installation, public sculpture, photography, music, and poetry. In one such performance, they established a corporation, Komar & Melamid, Inc., that had as its purpose "the buying and selling of human souls." They bought several hundred souls, including Andy Warhol's (who sold it to them for free), which was smuggled into Russia and then sold for 30 roubles.

Melamid moved to New Jersey in 1980. He continued to work with Komar in New York. In 1981, their Portrait of Hitler was slashed by an ex-Trotskyist disc jockey in Brooklyn. They did not repair the work, considering the attacker a co-author.

Ronald Feldman hosted the exhibition Sots Art in 1982, which was a commercial and critical success. In 1983, the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art purchased paintings. From 1981 to 1983, they continued to develop Sots Art in the series Nostalgic Socialist Realism, and from 1984 to 1990 they further developed Post-Art in the Diary Series, Anarchistic Synthesis Series, and Bayonne, N.J. Series.

 
The Stalin Monument (The Hague) (2006)

Throughout the 1980s, many prominent writers and critics discussed their work, and they were invited to participate in numerous exhibitions. They were the first Russian artists to receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts. They were also the first Russian artists to be invited to Documenta (Kassel, then in West Germany, 1987).

Komar & Melamid created their first public art sculpture in 1986, a bronze bust of Joseph Stalin, which was installed in the red light district of The Hague, Netherlands. In 1988, they became US citizens. In 1989, a monograph about them, written by Carter Ratcliff, was published by Abbeville Press.

In the early 1990s, Komar & Melamid created two icons for the Holy Rosary Church in Jersey City. In 1992, they began the series Monumental Propaganda, in response to the destruction of Socialist Realist monuments in Russia. At Komar & Melamid's invitation, more than 200 Russian and Western artists created projects for the preservation of monuments. Prolific press coverage of the project forestalled destruction of monuments in Russia.

From 1994 to 1997, the artists worked on the series People's Choice, whereby they created the "most wanted" and "least wanted" paintings of various countries based on the results of surveys conducted by professional polling companies. The book, Painting by Numbers: Komar & Melamid's Scientific Guide to Art, published in 1997, explains the statistical underpinnings of the polling process and provides the results of each country's preferences. Komar & Melamid used the same process in 1996–1997 in a collaboration with composer Dave Soldier to create The People's Choice Music, consisting of "The Most Wanted Song" (a love song with low male and female vocals, of moderate duration, pitch, and tempo) and "The Most Unwanted Song" (in part: an operatic soprano raps over cowboy music featuring least-wanted instruments bagpipes and tuba while children sing about holidays and advertise for Wal-Mart).

In 1998, Naked Revolution, an opera about George Washington, Vladimir Lenin and Marcel Duchamp, was created by Komar & Melamid with Dave Soldier and performed at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and the Kitchen, New York. It became part of the exhibition American Dreams, along with a series of eight paintings, forty collages, and the artists' collection of George Washington memorabilia.

In 1998, the artists also went to Thailand to teach elephants to paint, resulting in the book, When Elephants Paint: The Quest of Two Russian Artists to Save the Elephants of Thailand. In 2000, Christie's auction house held the first-ever auction of elephant paintings. The revenue generated supported the elephants and their keepers.

In 2001, Komar & Melamid began work on their last major project together, Symbols of the Big Bang, first exhibited at the Yeshiva University Museum, Center for Jewish History, New York. Using abstract symbols, the artists explored their spirituality and the connection between mysticism and science. In 2003, they began to turn some of the symbols into stained glass, which Russian authorities refused to exhibit during the Moscow portion of the exhibition, Berlin-Moscow/Moscow-Berlin (2004). Komar & Melamid ceased collaborating in 2003.[2]

In 2023, The group reunited for a retrospective at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University[3]

Style Edit

They are perhaps best known as the founders of SotsArt (СоцАрт), a form of Soviet Nonconformist Art that combined elements of Socialist Realism and Western Pop Art in a conceptual framework that also references Dadaism. Komar and Melamid often create many works within a common theme. Their prolific collaboration precludes from mentioning all of their projects, however, some of their best known series and projects are: Sots Art series (1972–1973), Post-Art series (1973), Ancestral Portraits series (1980), Nostalgic Socialist Realism series (1982–1983), Diary series (1984–1986), Anarchistic Synthesism series (1985–1986), Most-Wanted series (1993–1997), Monumental Propaganda (1994), Elephant Project (1995–2000), American Dreams (1994–1999).

People's Choice Edit

Komar and Melamid's People's Choice series, 1994–1997, consisted of the "most wanted" and "most unwanted" paintings of 11 countries, as well as two songs in the same vein. The artists commissioned polling companies in the 11 countries—including the United States, Russia, China, France, and Kenya—to conduct scientific polls to discover what they want to see in art. The use of polls was meant to mimic the American democratic process. Komar said, "Our interpretation of polls is our collaboration with various people of the world. It is a collaboration with [sic] new dictator—Majority." The process was also meant to change the artists role as a leader. Komar and Melamid believe that the broad public is an adequate judge of art, contrary to the historical precedence, much in the same way that the broad public in America is entrusted with electing the President. It is a new type of leader, one that asks questions, instead of a dictator. Melamid said, "Picasso mimicked Stalin, so we try to mimic Clinton."[4]

Komar has said he isn't so concerned that people actually enjoy the work, so long as it provokes thoughts of free will versus predetermination. To tie that concept into their earlier work, Komar said, "In our early work, we arrived at [the] definition of freedom that entailed being free from individual cliches, being free to change intonations and styles. Individuality lost its stability and its uniqueness. Now we are searching for a new freedom. We have been traveling to different countries, engaging in dull negotiations with representatives of polling companies, raising money for further polls, receiving more of less [the] same results, and painting more or less [the] same blue landscapes. Looking for freedom, we found slavery."[5]

A musical version of The People's Choice was produced with composer Dave Soldier resulting in The Most Wanted Song and The Most Unwanted Song.

References Edit

  1. ^ komarandmelamid.org
  2. ^ "Chronology".
  3. ^ "Soviet Pop Art Duo Reunites for First U.S. Retrospective Since Their Breakup". New York Times. 2023-04-26.
  4. ^ Wypijewski, JoAnn, ed. Painting by Numbers: Komar and Melamid's Scientific Guide to Art, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1997.
  5. ^ Wypijewski, JoAnn, ed. Painting by Numbers: Komar and Melamid's Scientific Guide to Art, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1997.
  • Ratcliff, Carter. Komar and Melamid, New York: Abbeville Press, 1988. ISBN 0-89659-891-8
  • Wypijewski, JoAnn, ed. Painting by Numbers: Komar and Melamid's Scientific Guide to Art, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1997. ISBN 978-0374228804
  • Komar and Melamid. When Elephants Paint: The Quest of Two Russian Artists to Save the Elephants of Thailand, New York: HarperCollins, 2000. ISBN 0-06-095352-7
  • Nathanson, Melvyn, ed. Komar/Melamid: Two Soviet Dissident Artists, Southern Illinois University Press, 1979. ISBN 9780809308873
  • Komar and Melamid The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, exhibition catalogue, 1985. ISBN 0-947912-20-7
  • Weiss, Evelyn. Komar & Melamid: The Most Wanted and the Most Unwanted Painting, Museum Ludwig Koln, Ostfildern: Cantz, 1997.
  • "Komar and Melamid" The Penguin Concise Dictionary of Art HistoryNancy Frazier (ed.) Penguin Reference, New York 2000 ISBN 0-670-10015-3 .
  • "Komar and Melamid" Art since the 40s by Jonathan Fineberg
  • "Komar und Melamid" Bildende Kunst im 20 Jahrhundert Edward Lucie-Smith (ed.) Könemann in der Tandem Verlags-Gmbh 2002, ISBN 3-8290-1717-0 .
  • "Komar and Melamid (1945– )" Who's Who in American Art 23rd edition, 1999–2000. Marquis, New Providence, NJ;
  • "Komar and Melamid" Contemporary Artists Fifth edition. Sara Pendergast and Tom Pendergastm (eds.) St. James Press, Detroit, 2002.
  • "Komar and Melamid" The Prestel Dictionary of Art and Artists in the 20th Century Prestel Verlag, New York, 2000.
  • "Komar and Melamid" World Artists, 1950–1980 Claude Marks (ed.) H.W. Wilson Co., New York, 1984.
  • "Komar and Melamid" A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art Ian Chilvers (ed.) Oxford University Press, New York 1998 ISBN 0-19-280092-2 .

External links Edit

  • Komar and Melamid Chronology and Images from 1972 to 2003
  • Walker, John. "Komar & Melamid". Glossary of Art, Architecture & Design since 1945, 3rd. ed.
  • The Most Wanted Paintings on the web
  • The People's Choice Music
  • Kolodzei Collection of Russian and Eastern European Art, Kolodzei Art Foundation
  • Sloane Gallery of Art

komar, melamid, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, p. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Komar and Melamid pronunciation Komar and Melamid is a tandem team of Russian born American conceptualist artists Vitaly Komar born 1943 and Alexander Melamid born 1945 In an artists statement they said that even if only one of us creates some of the projects and works we usually sign them together We are not just an artist we are a movement Both artists were born in Moscow but emigrated to Israel in 1977 and subsequently to New York in 1978 The pair s co authorship of works ceased in 2003 2004 1 Contents 1 Education 2 History 3 Style 4 People s Choice 5 References 6 External linksEducation EditKomar and Melamid attended the Moscow Art School from 1958 to 1960 followed by the Stroganov Institute of Art and Design Illustration dept graduating in 1967 They began working together shortly thereafter After 36 years they separated in 2003 History EditKomar amp Melamid s first joint exhibition Retrospectivism was held at the Blue Bird Cafe in Moscow 1967 The following year they joined the youth section of the Moscow Union of Artists and began teaching art In 1972 Komar amp Melamid founded a movement they called Sots Art a unique version of Soviet Pop and Conceptual Art that combines the principles of Dadaism and Socialist Realism In 1974 they were arrested during a performance in a Moscow apartment of Art Belongs to the People Later that year their Double Self Portrait similar to dual portraits of Lenin and Stalin was destroyed by the Soviet government along with works by other nonconformist artists at what became known as the Bulldozer Exhibition because bulldozers were used to destroy the artwork which had been displayed in an open air setting In 1976 Komar amp Melamid s work became more widely known Ronald Feldman Fine Arts New York hosted their first international exhibition but Soviet authorities denied them permission to attend In 1976 they also made their first attempt at emigrating but permission was denied In response they created their own country Trans State complete with passports and a constitution In 1977 they received permission to join relatives in Israel In 1978 they moved to New York in the same month their first museum exhibition opened at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Connecticut Throughout the 1970s Komar amp Melamid also worked in a style they called Post Art pioneering the use of multi stylistic images prefiguring the eclectic combination of styles in post modernism which became popular in the 1980s They collaborated on various conceptual projects ranging from painting and performance to installation public sculpture photography music and poetry In one such performance they established a corporation Komar amp Melamid Inc that had as its purpose the buying and selling of human souls They bought several hundred souls including Andy Warhol s who sold it to them for free which was smuggled into Russia and then sold for 30 roubles Melamid moved to New Jersey in 1980 He continued to work with Komar in New York In 1981 their Portrait of Hitler was slashed by an ex Trotskyist disc jockey in Brooklyn They did not repair the work considering the attacker a co author Ronald Feldman hosted the exhibition Sots Art in 1982 which was a commercial and critical success In 1983 the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art purchased paintings From 1981 to 1983 they continued to develop Sots Art in the series Nostalgic Socialist Realism and from 1984 to 1990 they further developed Post Art in the Diary Series Anarchistic Synthesis Series and Bayonne N J Series nbsp The Stalin Monument The Hague 2006 Throughout the 1980s many prominent writers and critics discussed their work and they were invited to participate in numerous exhibitions They were the first Russian artists to receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts They were also the first Russian artists to be invited to Documenta Kassel then in West Germany 1987 Komar amp Melamid created their first public art sculpture in 1986 a bronze bust of Joseph Stalin which was installed in the red light district of The Hague Netherlands In 1988 they became US citizens In 1989 a monograph about them written by Carter Ratcliff was published by Abbeville Press In the early 1990s Komar amp Melamid created two icons for the Holy Rosary Church in Jersey City In 1992 they began the series Monumental Propaganda in response to the destruction of Socialist Realist monuments in Russia At Komar amp Melamid s invitation more than 200 Russian and Western artists created projects for the preservation of monuments Prolific press coverage of the project forestalled destruction of monuments in Russia From 1994 to 1997 the artists worked on the series People s Choice whereby they created the most wanted and least wanted paintings of various countries based on the results of surveys conducted by professional polling companies The book Painting by Numbers Komar amp Melamid s Scientific Guide to Art published in 1997 explains the statistical underpinnings of the polling process and provides the results of each country s preferences Komar amp Melamid used the same process in 1996 1997 in a collaboration with composer Dave Soldier to create The People s Choice Music consisting of The Most Wanted Song a love song with low male and female vocals of moderate duration pitch and tempo and The Most Unwanted Song in part an operatic soprano raps over cowboy music featuring least wanted instruments bagpipes and tuba while children sing about holidays and advertise for Wal Mart In 1998 Naked Revolution an opera about George Washington Vladimir Lenin and Marcel Duchamp was created by Komar amp Melamid with Dave Soldier and performed at the Walker Art Center Minneapolis and the Kitchen New York It became part of the exhibition American Dreams along with a series of eight paintings forty collages and the artists collection of George Washington memorabilia In 1998 the artists also went to Thailand to teach elephants to paint resulting in the book When Elephants Paint The Quest of Two Russian Artists to Save the Elephants of Thailand In 2000 Christie s auction house held the first ever auction of elephant paintings The revenue generated supported the elephants and their keepers In 2001 Komar amp Melamid began work on their last major project together Symbols of the Big Bang first exhibited at the Yeshiva University Museum Center for Jewish History New York Using abstract symbols the artists explored their spirituality and the connection between mysticism and science In 2003 they began to turn some of the symbols into stained glass which Russian authorities refused to exhibit during the Moscow portion of the exhibition Berlin Moscow Moscow Berlin 2004 Komar amp Melamid ceased collaborating in 2003 2 In 2023 The group reunited for a retrospective at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers University 3 Style EditThey are perhaps best known as the founders of SotsArt SocArt a form of Soviet Nonconformist Art that combined elements of Socialist Realism and Western Pop Art in a conceptual framework that also references Dadaism Komar and Melamid often create many works within a common theme Their prolific collaboration precludes from mentioning all of their projects however some of their best known series and projects are Sots Art series 1972 1973 Post Art series 1973 Ancestral Portraits series 1980 Nostalgic Socialist Realism series 1982 1983 Diary series 1984 1986 Anarchistic Synthesism series 1985 1986 Most Wanted series 1993 1997 Monumental Propaganda 1994 Elephant Project 1995 2000 American Dreams 1994 1999 People s Choice EditKomar and Melamid s People s Choice series 1994 1997 consisted of the most wanted and most unwanted paintings of 11 countries as well as two songs in the same vein The artists commissioned polling companies in the 11 countries including the United States Russia China France and Kenya to conduct scientific polls to discover what they want to see in art The use of polls was meant to mimic the American democratic process Komar said Our interpretation of polls is our collaboration with various people of the world It is a collaboration with sic new dictator Majority The process was also meant to change the artists role as a leader Komar and Melamid believe that the broad public is an adequate judge of art contrary to the historical precedence much in the same way that the broad public in America is entrusted with electing the President It is a new type of leader one that asks questions instead of a dictator Melamid said Picasso mimicked Stalin so we try to mimic Clinton 4 Komar has said he isn t so concerned that people actually enjoy the work so long as it provokes thoughts of free will versus predetermination To tie that concept into their earlier work Komar said In our early work we arrived at the definition of freedom that entailed being free from individual cliches being free to change intonations and styles Individuality lost its stability and its uniqueness Now we are searching for a new freedom We have been traveling to different countries engaging in dull negotiations with representatives of polling companies raising money for further polls receiving more of less the same results and painting more or less the same blue landscapes Looking for freedom we found slavery 5 A musical version of The People s Choice was produced with composer Dave Soldier resulting in The Most Wanted Song and The Most Unwanted Song References Edit komarandmelamid org Chronology Soviet Pop Art Duo Reunites for First U S Retrospective Since Their Breakup New York Times 2023 04 26 Wypijewski JoAnn ed Painting by Numbers Komar and Melamid s Scientific Guide to Art New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1997 Wypijewski JoAnn ed Painting by Numbers Komar and Melamid s Scientific Guide to Art New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1997 Ratcliff Carter Komar and Melamid New York Abbeville Press 1988 ISBN 0 89659 891 8 Wypijewski JoAnn ed Painting by Numbers Komar and Melamid s Scientific Guide to Art New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1997 ISBN 978 0374228804 Komar and Melamid When Elephants Paint The Quest of Two Russian Artists to Save the Elephants of Thailand New York HarperCollins 2000 ISBN 0 06 095352 7 Nathanson Melvyn ed Komar Melamid Two Soviet Dissident Artists Southern Illinois University Press 1979 ISBN 9780809308873 Komar and Melamid The Fruitmarket Gallery Edinburgh exhibition catalogue 1985 ISBN 0 947912 20 7 Weiss Evelyn Komar amp Melamid The Most Wanted and the Most Unwanted Painting Museum Ludwig Koln Ostfildern Cantz 1997 Komar and Melamid The Penguin Concise Dictionary of Art HistoryNancy Frazier ed Penguin Reference New York 2000 ISBN 0 670 10015 3 Komar and Melamid Art since the 40s by Jonathan Fineberg Komar und Melamid Bildende Kunst im 20 Jahrhundert Edward Lucie Smith ed Konemann in der Tandem Verlags Gmbh 2002 ISBN 3 8290 1717 0 Komar and Melamid 1945 Who s Who in American Art 23rd edition 1999 2000 Marquis New Providence NJ Komar and Melamid Contemporary Artists Fifth edition Sara Pendergast and Tom Pendergastm eds St James Press Detroit 2002 Komar and Melamid The Prestel Dictionary of Art and Artists in the 20th Century Prestel Verlag New York 2000 Komar and Melamid World Artists 1950 1980 Claude Marks ed H W Wilson Co New York 1984 Komar and Melamid A Dictionary of Twentieth Century Art Ian Chilvers ed Oxford University Press New York 1998 ISBN 0 19 280092 2 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Komar and Melamid Komar and Melamid Chronology and Images from 1972 to 2003 Walker John Komar amp Melamid Glossary of Art Architecture amp Design since 1945 3rd ed The Most Wanted Paintings on the web The People s Choice Music Kolodzei Collection of Russian and Eastern European Art Kolodzei Art Foundation Sloane Gallery of Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Komar and Melamid amp oldid 1176452330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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