Persistent in changing nothing: revolution by political profanes,
curator Azad Asifovich
2017
ph Katya Ev, Galerie Mansart
Group exhibition with the works of Katya Ev, Georgy Litichevsky, Jeanne Susplugas, Hanna Zubkova
Images: Installation view, Katya Ev & Hanna Zubkova, Axe de Révolution, email, 2017
Found" digital object, the email serves as an edition for the presentation and conservation of the work Axe de Révolution (2014) —a unique live event that took place in Moscow in August 2014, closely tied to the political contexts and urban architectural setting of a specific moment in Russian modern history. As a communicative semantic container, it gathers all the structural components of the work, including its statement, protocol, video documentation, research materials, along with their contextualization.
Katya Ev & Hanna Zubkova, email edition: score, statement & documentation of live performance Axe de Révolution (2014)
Katya Ev & Hanna Zubkova, live performance Axe de Révolution, Moscow, 2014
ph Metro News, courtesy of the artists
"Axe de Révolution serves as a powerful example of an abstract performance [...] a pure semantic entity, that originated in the specific context and only gains its emotional intensity and meaning in relation to it. After extreme tightening of the internal politics, and return of state violence in 2011, 2014 became the point of no return in the contemporary Russian history. In the heat of war in Ukraine, it became clear that the country has taken the direction of repressive state, the beginning of return to the USSR’s politics of propaganda, state lies, blindness, isolation and nationalism. At this moment in history, two women, carrying a heavy iron beam through the streets of the Russian capital reference at once several layers of political, historical and cultural reality: a famous episode of Vladimir Lenin’s biography — carrying a beam together with the workers on the 1st May, 1920; the routine of construction works in contemporary Moscow landscape; the power relations structured by the city planning. In the climate of hysteria and paranoia that took over the mainstream media reality, the performance was perceived by many as a political protest action. It touched the nerve, provoked fear of another revolt, another anti-state action. A number of journalists, including the ones from state television, normally ignorant to contemporary art, arrived to cover the procession [...]". The End of the World, Centro Pecci, Prato (It), 2016, p. 352-353
Related artworks
score (statement) of live performance Axe de Révolution, email, 2017
Axe de Révolution, live performance, 2014
photographies based on live performance
Axe de Révolution, 2014
Axe de Révolution. Zéro, iron profile, map, 2018
Untitled (Axe de Révolution), print edition, 2016
Axe (de) Révolu(tion),
neon, 2014/2018
XIX. The Sun, tarot card, 2021