This book, published to coincide with Oleg Kulik’s performance of Two Kuliks at
Ikon Gallery, is a selection from a wealth of documentation and
commentary about the artist’s work since 1993. It provides an
unprecedented opportunity to consider in depth his extraordinary art
practice. Beginning with Deep into Russia, arguably Kulik’s
most shocking gesture, and then tracing his development through
performances with various animals, and ‘actions’ as an animal, quickly
a strong political and philosophical proposition becomes clear.
Kulik is one of the most radical and profound artists working today.
The Russian context - both Soviet and post-Soviet - from which he
springs provides a key to an understanding of his motivation, but his
message is universal: ‘Anthropomorphism has exhausted itself. Can man
forecast earthquakes like a small aquarium fish? Can he smell like a
dog, be lithe like a cat? Does he know a bee? No. besides that, an
animal cannot lie, pretend, deceive and cower.’
Kulik is clearly unimpressed by humanity, in a way not unlike that
of William Blake in this country during the so-called ‘Age of
Enlightenment’. Both artists express their abhorrence of human
corruption and, at the same time, propose an uncompromising vision of
the future. Like Kulik, Blake was badly misunderstood - and his
actions, such as sitting outdoors naked with his wife, whilst reading
Milton’s Paradise Lost, were cited as evidence of a certain
madness. With the benefit of hindsight, increasingly, we have come to
appreciate Blake as a rare insightful figure with the courage of his
convictions. The same should be said for Kulik.
Includes artist’s notes on performances and short biography.