Tonight! Re-opening and Book Party for Yevgeniy Fiks @ Winkleman Gallery
Yevgeniy Fiks' exhibition, Homosexuality Is Stalin's Atom Bomb to Destroy America,
had been open all of one day before damage from Hurricane Sandy closed
the gallery for 10 weeks. All the artwork from the exhibition was safe,
though, and we are very pleased to celebrate the reopening of Yevgeniy's
exhibition with a party to celebrate the publication of his new book, Moscow.*
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Yevgeniy Fiks
Homosexuality Is Stalin's Atom Bomb to Destroy America
February 15 - March 16, 2013
Opening Reception and Book Party: Friday, February 15, 2013, 6-8 PM
Winkleman Gallery is very pleased to present Homosexuality Is Stalin's Atom Bomb to Destroy America, our third solo exhibition by New York-based artist Yevgeniy Fiks. Taking
its title from a 1953 article by the Cold Warrior and pundit Arthur Guy
Mathews, this exhibition explores the historical and ideological links
between anti-Communism and homophobia in the United States, as well as
the intersections between Communism and sexual identity as it played out
during the 20th century. Works in the exhibition range from dry
factuality to humor, and farce, and posit the 20th century queerness as
the shared Other of the Communism-Capitalism dichotomy, while
tracing the uneasy yet tangible historical links between the early 20th
century Communist activism and the gay rights movement of the second
half of the century.
The exhibition delves into the interlocking histories of the “Red”
and “Lavender” scares during the McCarthy-era, when anti-Communist and
anti-gay sentiments were fused together in the Cold War witch-hunt
rhetoric. Pundits and government officials went as far as envisioning a
sinister conspiracy: the Soviet Union is promoting homosexuality as a
tool to destroy America. Concurrently, the federal government purged
homosexuals that it employed, calling them “security risks”—vulnerable
of being blackmailed by Soviet agents into working for them.
Ironically, in response to and mirroring its ideological enemy, the
American Communist Party also purged known gays from its ranks—marking
them as “security risks”—for fear that gay Communists were vulnerable to
blackmail and could become informants for the Feds. The official
charter of the Communist Party USA even before its 1950s anti-gay purge
strictly prohibited gays from membership, adhering to the policies of
the Communist Party of the Soviet Union where homosexuality was
officially criminalized under Stalin and stigmatized as a "capitalist
degeneracy."
Works in the exhibition include Stalin's Atom Bomb a.k.a. Homosexuality, a
series of prints that highlights paranoid anti-communist and anti-gay
quotations from American politicians and pundits of the era. Another
series, Joe-1 Cruising in Washington, DC includes photographs
of a six-foot cutout of the 1949 Soviet nuclear test explosion
RDS-1—codenamed in the US as "Joe-1"—posing, in 2012, at locations that
had been popular gay cruising sites in Washington D.C. circa
1930s-1950s. The Security Risk Map of Manhattan maps gay
cruising and Communist meeting sites of the 1930-1950s, presenting an
open ended question about the "conspiracy" and overlap between the two
groups.
Two installations focus on a particular historical figure whose
life epitomized this ironic and widely unknown intersection of policies.
The piece History of the CPUSA (Harry Hay) consists of a 1952 edition of History of the Communist Party of the United States by
William Z. Foster, with inserts about the life and work of Harry Hay
(1912–2002). Harry Hay was a communist activist who was forced out of
the CPUSA during the McCarthy era, and who later became one of the
founders of the gay rights movement in the United States. The work Marxism and the National Question (Harry Hay) is an installation that consists of Joseph Stalin’s 1942 English edition books, Marxism and the National Question, in which Stalin outlines his definition of national minorities. This book sparked Harry Hay’s groundbreaking concept that “gay” constitute a minority—similar to African-Americans or Jews—and as a separate people
they are entitled to civil rights. In a whim of historical irony, Hay
appropriated the writings by the oppressive Soviet Thermidorian dictator
and turned them into a tool of liberation, laying a foundation for the
gay movement in the United States.
Yevgeniy Fiks was born in Moscow in 1972 and has been living
and working in New York since 1994. Fiks has produced many projects on
the subject of the Post-Soviet dialog in the West, among them: Ayn Rand
in Illustration, a series of drawing pairing descriptive text from Atlas Shrugged with uncannily complimentary Soviet Socialist Realism classic
artworks; “Lenin for Your Library?” in which he mailed V.I. Lenin’s
text “Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism” to one hundred
global corporations as a donation for their corporate libraries;
“Communist Party USA,” a series of portraits of current members of
Communist Party USA, painted from life in the Party’s national
headquarters in New York City; and “Communist Guide to New York City,” a
series of photographs of buildings and public places in New York City
that are connected to the history of the American Communist movement. Fiks’
work has been shown internationally. This includes exhibitions in the
United States at Winkleman and Postmasters galleries (both in New York)
Mass MoCA, and the Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art; the Moscow Museum
of Modern Art and Marat Guelman Gallery in Moscow; Sala de Arte Público
Siqueiros in Mexico City, and the Museu Colecção Berardo in Lisbon. His
work has been included in the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art (2011,
2009, 2007 and 2005), Biennale of Sydney (2008) and Thessaloniki
Biennale of Contemporary Art (2007).
Image above : Yevgeniy Fiks, Joe-1 Cruising in Washington, DC (Monument Grounds), 2012, photograph.
BOOK PARTY
Friday, February 15, 2013, 6-8 PM
About the book
Yevgeniy Fiks’ newest book — Moscow (Ugly Duckling Presse, Brooklyn, 2013) — documents gay cruising sites in Soviet Moscow, from the early 1920s to the USSR’s dissolution in the early 1990s. Photographed in 2008 in a simple but haunting documentary style, these sites of the bygone queer underground present a hidden and forgotten Moscow, with a particular focus on Revolutionary Communist sites appropriated by queer Muscovites. The book concludes with the first English-language publication of a 1934 letter to Joseph Stalin in which British communist Harry Whyte presents a Marxist defense of homosexuality in light of its recriminalization in the USSR.
UGLY DUCKLING PRESSE | $35 | ISBN 978-1-933254-61-6
Cloth-bound & foil-stamped | 104 pages | Full Color | 8” x 10”
Release Date: February 15, 2013
Yevgeniy Fiks’ newest book — Moscow (Ugly Duckling Presse, Brooklyn, 2013) — documents gay cruising sites in Soviet Moscow, from the early 1920s to the USSR’s dissolution in the early 1990s. Photographed in 2008 in a simple but haunting documentary style, these sites of the bygone queer underground present a hidden and forgotten Moscow, with a particular focus on Revolutionary Communist sites appropriated by queer Muscovites. The book concludes with the first English-language publication of a 1934 letter to Joseph Stalin in which British communist Harry Whyte presents a Marxist defense of homosexuality in light of its recriminalization in the USSR.
UGLY DUCKLING PRESSE | $35 | ISBN 978-1-933254-61-6
Cloth-bound & foil-stamped | 104 pages | Full Color | 8” x 10”
Release Date: February 15, 2013
For more information, contact Edward Winkleman at 212.643.3152 or edward@winkleman.com.
1 Comments:
The Cultural Cold War hinted more at the US's record on slavery as the Achilles Heel Stalin liked to exploit. No doubt, homosexuality was to rattle J. Edgar Hoover.
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