Event

Soviet Art Photography in the 1970s-80s
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Title:
Soviet Art Photography in the 1970s-80s
When:
Oct 3 - Mar 28 
Where:
Zimmerli Art Museum (Rutgers University) - New Brunswick
Category:
Arts
Created by:
Zampro

Description

Four Perspectives Through the Lens: Soviet Art Photography in the 1970s-80s
This exhibition presents a selection of more than sixty photographs from the Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection of Soviet Nonconformist Art by Francisco Infante, Vladimir Kupriyanov, Boris Mikhailov, and Aleksandr Slyusarev, four major Soviet artists working with photography in 1970 –1980s. Photography was not officially considered an art in the Soviet Union at that time, and it was not taught in art schools. On the other hand, the amateur status of artistic photography, unrestricted by professional conventions or censorship, allowed great creative freedom and presented wide opportunities for experimentation. Soviet photographers made exceedingly canny, inventive, and highly individual use of the medium, expressing ideas that were both specific and universal in character.

These four artists demonstrate four different approaches to the photograph, and testify to the range and variety of fine art photography’s development in Soviet unofficial art. Two – Slyusarev and Mikhailov – are straightforward art photographers. Two others – Infante and Kupriyanov – are visual artists, who use photography as a medium to transcribe their creative ideas. Two of the four – Kupriyanov and Mikhailov – are concerned with social issues; the other two – Infante and Slyusarev – explore abstract categories, such as the geometry of light and reflections, often with reference to Russian avant-garde and/or western modernist practice.

The exhibition presents an opportunity for multiple comparisons and cross-references in areas such as the approaches to social themes, cultural and art historical associations, and various photographic techniques and artistic effects.


Venue

Zimmerli Art Museum (Rutgers University)
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Map
Venue:
Zimmerli Art Museum (Rutgers University)   -   Website
Street:
71 Hamilton Street
ZIP:
08901
City:
New Brunswick
State:
NJ

Venue Info

The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, one of the largest and most distinguished university-based museums in the nation, is located on the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The Zimmerli Art Museum houses more than 60,000 works, including Russian and Soviet Nonconformist Art from the acclaimed Dodge Collection, American art from the 18th-century to the present, and six centuries of European art with a particular focus on 19th-century French art. The Zimmerli is also noted for its strong holdings of works on paper, including prints, rare books, drawings, photographs, and original illustrations for children's books. Phone: 732-932-7237


Directions:
By bus:Suburban Transit Bus to New Brunswick leaves from the Port Authority. Telephone: 732/249-1100
By train:NJ Transit Train to New Brunswick leaves from Penn Station. Telephone: 1.800.772.2222
By car:Take the NJ Turnpike to exit 9. Follow signs for "Route 18 North, New Brunswick" for approximately 3 mi. Follow large overhead green sign that reads "George Street, Rutgers University, exit 1/2 mile". At exit light (George Street) turn left. Go to the next light at Hamilton Street. Museum is on the corner.

Museum Hours:
Tuesday - Friday:10:00am-4:30pm Open until 9pm on the first Wednesday of each month.
Weekends: Noon-5:00pm
Closed: Mondays; all year. Closed month of August.
Holidays: Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Thursday & Friday, December 25, January 1

Admission:

$6 for adults who are not members. $5 for citizens over 65. Members, children under 18, Rutgers University students, faculty, and staff with a valid I.D. enjoy free admission. Free admission for all visitors on the first Sunday of every month.


Parking:
Monday - Friday:Limited parking available by Kirkpatrick Chapel (entrance at George and Somerset St.) Metered parking on street.
Saturday - Sunday: Free parking on street and in lots marked with P