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Vitaly Komar (1943) and Alexander Melamid (1945) are born in Moscow. They
attend and graduate from the Stroganov School of Art and Design (1967).
Their first joint show, Retrospectivism, appears in the Blue Bird CafÈ (Moscow, 1967).
“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”
(from artist’s statement).
During the late 60’s and early 70’s, Komar
& Melamid found the movement that they call Sots Art, a unique version
of Soviet Pop and Conceptual Art, which combines the principles of Dadaism
and Socialist Realism. During these years, they also work on Post-Art,
pioneering multi-stylistical images prescient of post-modernism, which
will become popular in the 80’s. They collaborate on various conceptual
projects, ranging from painting and performance to installation, public
sculpture, photography, music, and poetry. They also collaborate with
other artists, for example, Douglas Davis, Fluxus member Charlotte Moorman,
Andy Warhol, among others. In 1973, they are expelled from the Youth section of the
Soviet Artist Union. In 1974, they are arrested during a performance in
a Moscow apartment show and later their works, along with the works of
other nonconformist artists, are destroyed by Soviet authorities at the
open-door “Bulldozer Show.” By 1978 they are living in New
York. Their first show in the West is at the Feldman Gallery (New York,
1976), and their first individual museum show is at the Hartford Athenaeum
(Harford, USA, 1978). In the 80’s, they continue developing their Sots
Art (Nostalgic Socialist Realism Series, May 1st Installation at the Palladium
Disco) and Post-Art (Diary Series, Anarchistic Synthesis Series, Bayonne,
N.J. Series). They are the first Russian artists to receive funding from
the National Endowment for the Arts, and are also the first Russian artists
to be invited to the Documenta 8 (Kassel, Germany, 1987). They devote their projects in the 90’s to iconoclasm
(Monumental Propaganda, American Dreams), democracy and elitism by statistics (People’s
Choice), and ecology (Ecollaboration with Animals, Asian Elephant Project).
Komar & Melamid’s most recent projects are devoted to art as
a religion and to the synthesis of irony and spirituality (Van Gogh Art Ministry,
Symbols of the Big Bang and Nostalgic Nonconformist Art, a project in progress).
They can be found in Oxford’s Dictionary of 20th Century Art; The
Penguin Concise Dictionary of Art History; Art Since the 40’s; Bildende
Kunst im 20 Jahrhundert; and Phaidon’s The 20th-Century Art
Book. Selected individual exhibitions: Museum of Modern Art
(Oxford, 1985) and Museum of Decorative Art in the Louvre (Paris 1985-1986);
NGBK (Berlin, 1987); Brooklyn Museum of Art (New York, 1989); Museum of
Modern Art (Cologne, 1997); Kunsthalle Vienna (Vienna, 1998); Venice Biennial
(Venice, 1999); Kawamura Memorial Museum of Art (Japan, 2024); Yeshiva
University Museum (New York, 2024-2003). Selected Public Collections: Guggenheim Museum (New York),
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), Whitney Museum of American Art
(New York), Museum of Modern Art (New York), Victoria and Albert Museum
(London), Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam), Albertina (Vienna), Museum Ludwig
(Cologne), San Francisco Museum of Art.
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