Search preferences

Search filters

Product Type

  • All Product Types 
  • Books (1)
  • Magazines & Periodicals (No further results match this refinement)
  • Comics (No further results match this refinement)
  • Sheet Music (No further results match this refinement)
  • Art, Prints & Posters (No further results match this refinement)
  • Photographs (No further results match this refinement)
  • Maps (No further results match this refinement)
  • Manuscripts & Paper Collectibles (No further results match this refinement)

Condition

Binding

Collectible Attributes

Free Shipping

  • Free Shipping to U.S.A. (No further results match this refinement)
Seller Location
  • Seller image for Decorative Arts of the USSR [1989 Russian-Language Journal] - Issue 375 for sale by Cameron-Wolfe Booksellers

    Stapled Wraps. Condition: Very Good. Mitki Artists (illustrator). No.2 (Issue 375). An outstanding journal, established in 1957 by the just-created Union of Artists of the USSR - SIGNED by one of the contributors. The highlight of this particular large-format issue is an extended illustrated article about the Mitki group (signed and inscribed by one of the Mitki members, with whom I met in 1989). The Mitki - or Mitky - movement originally emerged from Vladimir Shinkarev's literary work Mitki, which consists of eight chapters. The first five chapters were written between 1984 and 1985, though the book was not finished until four years later. The complete version was officially published in 1990. It encompasses a collection of ironic and absurd essays, anecdotes, conversations and opinions on different cultural subjects, which extend artistic sensibility and development into a comprehensive and cohesive life philosophy that even includes a specifically developed language. Although Mitki is fictional it draws on the characteristics of real people, combining these to create Mityok, the archetypal member of the Mitki group who acts on the instructions provided by the Mitki script. The Mitki group consisted of a number of St. Petersburg friends and artists of which were the main members Vladimir Shinkarev, Alexander Florensky and Dmitri Shagin. Shinkarev's eponymous book supplied the group with the manifesto for their emergent movement. // The first collective exhibition of Mitki paintings in 1984 ended peacefully, but the second in St. Petersburg was raided by police. After Glasnost the group's work became accepted and was soon shown beyond St. Petersburg. Mitki, written before and after Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika in 1987, expresses the transitions and associated anxieties of its time. Shinkarev and Florensky both left the Mitki group to develop their own work in the new Russia. // The Mitki do not promote specific artistic principles, being instead united by a certain collective spirit: an optimistic and straightforward world-view, representation of the wide breadth of the Russian soul, respect for art, humour and freedom. [I've included a couple scans of their art-work.] Their official slogan is "The Mitki don't want to defeat anybody, which is why they will conquer the world." CONTENTS: See accompanying scan of the Table of Contents. 52 pages. [Additional contributors: Fidail Ibragimov and Mara Shashkina.] CONDITION: a bright, unmarked, uncreased copy with light shelf-wear plus some discoloration on the back cover - its center page detached from the staples. This nevertheless quite attractive copy is now in a clear, protective polypropylene bag with archival backing board. Signed by Artist.