Mother Tongue
Yevgeniy Fiks

9 March - 11 May 2019

The first London solo exhibition by New York-based Russian artist Yevgeniy Fiks, exploring historical gay Russian argot. This coded language dates back to Soviet times and can be compared to Britain’s ‘polari’ jargon. Through this exhibition Fiks elevates this ‘themed’ language into a poetic code, celebrating its wit and nuance.  The exhibition reclaims and celebrates Soviet-era Russian gay argot as a unique cultural phenomenon and gives a historical context to today’s post-Soviet LGBTQ community whose language partially evolved from it. 

The exhibition takes the form of an installation, recreating the environment of a classroom, equipped with a black board, alphabet charts, texts books, and a language instructional video, designed as formal introduction to the vocabulary and usage of the argot.

Soviet era pleshki - or cruising sites - are presented in a series of photographs of Moscow, empty of people - many of them famous tourist destinations – subverting standard perceptions of the city. Fiks envisions the 'language of the pleshka' as a complete and distinct language, separate from standard Russian.

A semi-humorous instruction video gives a lesson in how to use and construct phrases from this ‘themed’ language. Like polari, Soviet gay slang contributed to the sense of the separate identity of queer communities of the time, and allowed users to communicate openly about things that could have seen them excluded from mainstream society, or even imprisoned; thus it was a defense mechanism that provided safety.

The exhibition is accompanied by the recently published ‘‘Mother Tongue/ Родная Речь’’ a book by Fiks, both about, and written in, Soviet-era Russian gay argot.

In the book, Russian gay argot is conceptualised as a literary language fit for the production of high culture, including written literature. The book includes a linguistic introduction to Soviet-era Russian gay argot and a collection of conceptual poetry written by Fiks in that language.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the beginning of the globalisation era in the 1990s, a global (mostly Anglo-American) gay slang has fused with Soviet-era gay speech, and many original Russian queer terms that were used before the 1990s have been replaced with Anglo-American borrowings, diluting the unique Soviet culture of sexual and gender dissent.  

After decades of persecution and attempts to sideline the Russian LGBTQ community, male homosexuality was decriminalised in Russia in 1993. The period between 1993 and around 2013 was characterised by slow and difficult improvements to the conditions of queer life in Russia. This modest progress was interrupted in 2013 with the introduction of the “Gay Propaganda Law”, which ushered in a new wave of state and social homophobia. At the same time it led to LGBTQ issues in Russia becoming central to public debate in an unprecedented way.

Yevgeniy Fiks was born in Moscow in 1972 and has been living and working in New York since 1994. Fiks has produced many projects on the subject of the Post-Soviet dialog in the West, among them: “Lenin for Your Library?” in which he mailed V.I. Lenin’s text "Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism” to one hundred global corporations as a donation for their corporate libraries; “Communist Party USA,” a series of portraits of current members of Communist Party USA, painted from life in the Party’s national headquarters in New York City; and “Communist Guide to New York City,” a series of photographs of buildings and public places in New York City that are connected to the history of the American Communist movement. Fiks’ work has been shown internationally. This includes exhibitions in the United States at Winkleman and Postmasters galleries (both in New York) Mass MoCA, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Moscow Museum of Modern Art and Marat Guelman Gallery in Moscow; Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros in Mexico City, and the Museu Colecção Berardo in Lisbon. His work has been included in the Biennale of Sydney (2008), Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art (2011), and Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art (2015).

In collaboration with GRAD

 
Mother Tongue by Yevgeny Fiks