Stopping off at Calvert 22, East London's foundation for Russian and Eastern European art, Garageland Reviewer Joe Turnbull finds he has to listen very closely to hear the whispers of the body electric.
What was once a vociferous mantra of anti-communism is now
just a whisper; a muted spectre of Cold War propaganda. Nevertheless, it
remains imprinted on the western cultural psyche like a faded tattoo. Nowhere
is this more manifest than in the curation of exhibitions containing artwork
from the wrong side of the Iron Curtain. When presenting work from the former
Soviet states, galleries all too often either exhibit work that is tantamount
to state-funded propaganda or, as has been the case more recently, present work
that stiflingly critiques the censorship and oppression of those regimes through
coded Aesopian symbolism.