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| UPDATED
EVERY THURSDAY
Thursday
18th March 2004 |
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| All
content © New Journal Enterprises, 2004. |
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| FEATURES |
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BY ELENA BORISSOVA |

‘Phrases and bases’ by V Govorkov (1952) satirising Cold
War America’s propagandising double standards

Grigorian in KGB uniform

A Soviet general’s watch for sale on the website. The website
has a collection of original military watches which cost around £10-£15 |
| Sergo
is capitalising on communist kitsch |
Sergo Grigorian first
came to London as a Russian foreign trade ministry lawyer on a dream
posting. That was in 1991. He scarcely imagined that the collapse
of the Soviet Union would be so complete – swept away on Mikhail
Gorbachev’s liberating tide of glasnost and perestroika.
Grigorian, who lives in Highgate, fell in love with London and decided
to join the growing ranks of the ‘bizniki’ – expatriate
Russians striking out as entrepreneurs in a new Russian revolution.
Next week he launches a major exhibition of original Soviet poster
art, at the Air gallery in Mayfair.
The old order may have gone, but for Grigorian the Mayfair show is
part of a master business plan to capitalise on the discarded trappings
and artefacts of the Soviet-era and re-brand them as fashion accessories
and sell them on the internet.
His home in Cholmley Park, Highgate – not far from where Karl
Marx, the founder of communism, is buried in Highgate Cemetery –
is a treasure trove of Soviet state bric-a-brac for which he believes
there is a growing demand.
Grigorian has cheekily resurrected a squad of the once-famed Communist
Party young pioneers as cheerleaders for the exhibition preview.
The ‘Soviet Young Guard’ will be waving the Hammer and
Sickle at the Red Avant-Garde show in a peaceful bid to win over the
hearts and minds of fashion-conscious youth.
The troop of teenage Pioneers has been recruited from among the expatriate
Russian community in London by Grigorian, who is still a card-carrying
member of Russia’s post Soviet Communist party.
But there will be nothing proletarian about Grigorian’s young
guard – they will be kitted out in costumes designed by leading
Georgian haute couturists Tata-Naka who trained at St Martin’s
School of Art.
All special invitation ticket guests will have to wear pioneer scarlet
scarves and join the pioneer squad flag-waving.
The culmination of the show will be traditional Russian reception
with buckets of caviar and champagne handed out to invited preview
guests.
This authentic celebration of the Soviet era has become an obsession
for 43-year-old Grigorian. He believes that communist-era culture
is undergoing a renaissance and Soviet posters hitherto regarded simply
as propaganda, have an intrinsic value that transcends their political
provenance.
“Soviet Socialism was the greatest experiment in history,”
says Grigorian. “But even though it failed, we should appreciate
its politics, art and culture. That never died.”
Grigorian has adopted a marketing strategy to sell communist kitsch.
His online bazaar features a host of Communist-era artefacts –
from Soviet navy nuclear submarine wristwatches to ‘Red Moscow’
perfume, the official state scent whose mixture of jasmine and bergamot
was the only choice available for Soviet dames.
All 70 posters featured at the exhibition were produced between 1918
and 1981 by world-renowned masters, including Klutsis, Deni and Kochergin.
And Grigorian says: “Looking at these posters, you can simply
read a fascinating pictorial history of the life and times in the
Soviet Union, in which we all have been participants.”
It is no surprise that in the last decade the market for the Soviet
poster art has taken off in a big way at exhibitions and auction houses
in both the West and Russia.
Ten years ago Sotheby’s sold a poster by Klutsis for £17,000.
Today the market value of artists like Lissitsky is in excess of £55,000.
For Sergo Grigorian, that’s just the beginning.
n Red Avant Garde: Soviet Era Poster Art
The Air Gallery
32 Dover Street, Mayfair
from 21 to 27 March
0208 995 9330
www.redavantgarde.com |
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