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Event Details
Event:

Printmaking from Soviet Estonia, Part II

Date: Sunday, September 23rd 2007
Time: 10:00 am
Venue Name:

The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum

Ticket Prices:
Online Ticket Sales Link: http://www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu/exhibitions/?id=60
Info/Notes:

Printmaking from Soviet Estonia, Part II

Lower Dodge Galleries
Sep 08, 2007 - Jan 27, 2008

Estonia has a long tradition of printmaking that continues to this day. While Estonia was a republic of the Soviet Union, the ruling regime concentrated on censoring two forms of expression to ensure that creative work adhered to dictated norms: painting and the written novel. Thus, during the Cold War, graphic artists in Estonia enjoyed a degree of creative freedom.

The Estonian people struggled to retain their artistic heritage under the pressures of Soviet power and its officially sanctioned art of Socialist Realism. Expression of individual national identity, such as depiction of the Estonian republican flag, was forbidden by official policy. The graphic print however, with its low visibility to censors, gave expression to a vast array of nonconformist subjects drawn from Estonia’s distinctive culture and geography.

Estonia’s proximity to Europe (Finland in particular), provided artists with access to Western culture that was less available to their counterparts in Moscow. Combined with the ideologically lax culture of printmaking, this relationship allowed artists an exchange with contemporary trends in art beyond the Iron Curtain - an exchange more restricted by the regime in the rest of the USSR. These printmakers engaged Western Pop, Minimalism, and Conceptual Art on an international level unique to Estonia. Maintaining forbidden modernist practices, artists proved expert in maneuvering vast swaths of art history – from photography’s past to abstraction and beyond – in their determination to be a part of that history.

Admission:
$3.00 per person for adults who are not members of the museum. Entrance to the museum is free at all times for members, all children under 18, and Rutgers University students, faculty, and staff with a valid I.D. In addition, the first Sunday of each month will be free to all.

Map Link: Click here for map and directions.


Artist Name:

Printmaking from Soviet Estonia, Part II

Artist Website: http://
Presented By:
Artist Info/Notes:


Venue Name:

The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum

Venue Website: http://www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu
Venue Contact Phone:
Venue Fax: 732.932.8201
Venue Address1: Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Venue Info/Notes:
Map Link: Click here for map and directions.

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