
On view from September 12 to December 3, 2006, The Space of Freedom: Apartment Exhibitions in Leningrad, 1964-1986, presents more than forty artworks created during the period in Russian history when the Soviet government attempted to eradicate all art that did not conform to the government's edicts. Social justice and the right of freedom of speech and expression are the underlying themes of The Space of Freedom. Art from the collection of the Museum of Nonconformist Art, Pushkinskaya-10 Art Centre, St. Petersburg, Russia, is displayed in a re-created Soviet communal apartment with details and furnishings typical of the era.
Banned from public expression and demonstration, many Russian artists began in the late 1950s to exhibit in their own communal apartments, for periods of a day or two, or even just a few hours. Attendance at exhibitions numbered as many as one thousand people and up to one hundred or more artworks would be displayed in a single room of an apartment. For such free expression, many artists suffered suppression, imprisonment, and even death."Meet The Artist" Series
"Creating a Space of Freedom in Soviet Russia."
Lecture by Evgeny Orlov, Director, Museum of Nonconformist Art, and Vice President, Pushkinskaya-10 Art Centre and Joseph C. Troncale, Associate Professor of Russian and Co-Director of the Russian Studies Program, University of Richmond and curator the exhibition
Friday, September 18, 2006, 7 p.m.
Camp Concert Hall, George M. Modlin Center for the Arts
Lecture
University of Richmond's Center for Civic Engagement Brown Bag Series: "An Oasis in a Desert of Collapse: Pushkin 10 Continues the Struggle for Free Expression."
Lecture by Evgeny Orlov and Joseph Troncale.
Friday, September 22, 2006, 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art, University Museums,
George M. Modlin Center for the Arts
Reception and Preview of the exhibition
Friday, September 18, 2006, 8 to 9 p.m.
Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art, University Museums,
George M. Modlin Center for the Arts