MOSCOW.- The Moscow Museum of Modern Art is presenting an important new acquisition into its collection. It consists of ten graphic sheets from the 1990s featuring a depiction of two monsters, from the famous series Installation for a Poor Cleaning Lady by Dmitri Alexandrovich Prigov (1940-2007) a poet and an artist, a foremost representative of Russian art in the second half of the twentieth- and early twenty-first centuries. The works were donated to the museum by his widow, Nadezhda Burova-Prigova, and are exhibited in one of the rooms in the MMOMA building at ulitsa Petrovka as part of the D.A. Prigov Week a program of events in the capitals museums and other cultural institutions marking the tenth anniversary of the artists passing.
To date, the museum which in 2008 organized the first large-scale retrospective exhibition of Dmitri Prigov Citizens! Please Mind Yourselves! has assembled a relatively compact, but quite representative corpus of his pieces, executed at different periods and in various media. These are the multi-part works on paper The Large Egg (1978), Two Vertically Arranged Eyes (1997) and Mene, Tekel, Upharsin (1997), the two compositions from the Bestiary series (1990s), the collage Two Cups (Buddha) (1996) and six objects from the late period project Monuments (2006) that combines performance and photography. The drawings now donated to the museum belong to an extensive group of sketches for the so-called phantom installations and reveal an essential aspect of Prigovs creative heritage, remarkably complementing the museums collection.
The exhibition devoted to this donation, prepared by the MMOMA Research Department, not only demonstrates the newly acquired drawings amidst a selection of Prigovs works from the museums holdings, as well as archival materials. It proposes the viewer to interpret the iconographic structure of the sketches, which may remind one of stills from a never-executed animated film, and try to understand the elements out of which their stage-like symbolic space is constructed. The focus is on the three motifs each one archetypical for Prigov and each having its own abundant iconographic history: the kneeling figure seen from the back (that is the poor cleaning lady herself), the all-seeing eye and the ouroboros the snake biting its own tale. Their genealogy, replete with meanings, goes back deep into the ages. Forming various combinations, these motifs add up to a complex, programmatically tautological and ultimately undecipherable statement. It is imbued with existential anxiety intermingled with the authors recognizable sense of irony, and touches on life and death, on the place and role of the human being in the face of an unknown transcendental force, on the relationship between the viewer and the artist.