What Is to Be Done – Now? Discussions of Scholarship on So-called “Russian” Art and Culture.
10th Graduate Workshop of the Russian(?) Art & Culture Group.
The ongoing Russian war against Ukraine has caused a deep crisis of scholarship. Taking this as a point of departure, the goal of the tenth workshop of the Russian(?) Art & Culture Group is to find appropriate terms, approaches, and strategies that offer new insights into Imperial Russian and Soviet art and culture in order to contribute to the ongoing debates regarding the future of scholarship in this field of research.
PROGRAM
Friday, September 27
13:30-14:00
Registration
14:00-14:30
Opening: Introduction and Anniversary Review
Isabel Wünsche, Constructor University Bremen
14:30-15:00
Keynote: The History of Art in the Shadow of War: On the Necessity of Revising the Narrative of Russian/Soviet Modernism
Konstantin Akinsha, independent scholar, Ferrara
15:00-15:30 Coffee Break
Panel I: Imperial Imaginaries
Chair: Julia Secklehner
15:30-16:00
Intersections of Empires, Intersections of Cultures: On Traces of Occident and Orient in the Russian Empire’s Visual Culture
Kacper Radny, Justus Liebig University, Giessen
16:00-16:30
Russian Empire = Russian Culture? A Transcultural Approach to Artists of a Multinational Empire
Mira Kozhanova, University of Bamberg
16:30-17:00
Ruscism as Artistic Geo-Imagination and the Challenges to its Hegemony
Nikolay Smirnov, documenta Institut, Kassel
17:00-17:30 Coffee Break
17:30-19:00
Roundtable Discussion: What Is “Russian” Art and Culture?
With Konstantin Akinsha, independent scholar, Ferrara,
Louise Hardiman, Kingston University, London,
and Maria Silina, Ruhr University Bochum
Moderation: Georg Sokolov
19:00 Dinner Reception
Saturday, September 28
09:00-09:30 Morning Coffee
Panel II: Challenging Imperial Histories
Chair: Sebastian Borkhardt
09:30-10:00
Russian Imperial History of the Nineteenth Century: The Territory of Others
Marat Ismagilov, Ruhr University Bochum
10:00-10:30
What Is to Be Done at the Crossroads?
Ludmila Piters-Hofmann, independent scholar, Bonn
10:30-10:45 Coffee Break
Panel III: Avant-Garde Artists in a Transcultural Context
Chair: Irina Riznychok
10:45-11:15
Navigating Boundaries: Varvara Bubnova's Artistic Journey through Russian Revolution, Constructivism, and Pre-War Japan
Olga Isaeva, University of Bonn
11:15-11:45
What Is to Be Done with Kandinsky?
Sebastian Borkhardt, documenta archiv, Kassel
11:45-12:45 Lunch Break
Panel IV: Decentralizing “Russian” Twentieth-Century Art
Chair: Ludmila Piters-Hofmann
12:45-13:15
The Denial of Artists' Self-Determination: Causes and Consequences
Olga Olkheft, University of Bielefeld
13:15-13:45
On the Margins(?): Soviet Art Outside Moscow
Irina Riznychok, Constructor University
13:45-14:15
Neither Center nor Periphery: How to Decolonize the Study of Leningrad Nonconformist Art
Georg Sokolov, Constructor University
14:15-14:30 Coffee Break
Panel V: Artistic Politics and Russia’s War on Ukraine
Chair: Georg Sokolov
14:30-15:00
Living Dead: Artistic Crafts in the Context of Soviet and Russian Necropolitics
Elizaveta Berezina, University of Leipzig
15:00-15:30
Recontextualizing Unofficial Soviet Art in the Wake of Russia's War on Ukraine: The Case of Vadim Sidur's "Death by Bombs" in Dnipro
Charlotte Adèle Murphy, Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg
15:30-16:00 Concluding Discussion
Registration by September 22, 2024, at workshoprussian-art.net.
Working language: English
Quellennachweis:
CONF: What Is to Be Done – Now? (Bremen, 27-28 Sep 24). In: ArtHist.net, 09.09.2024. Letzter Zugriff 22.12.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/42537>.