Difference between revisions 817517335 and 817644830 on enwiki

{{multipleissues|
{{inline|date=January 2017}}
{{BLP sources|date=February 2013}}}}
{{Infobox artist
| name          = Ilya Kabakov
| image         = "The Man Who Flew in to Space From His Apartment"("L'home que va volar a l'espai des del seu apartament").jpg
| imagesize     =
| caption       = Ilya Kabakov gives instructions for the installation "The Man Who will Fly into Space From His Apartment"
(contracted; show full)ts that lived on Sretensky Boulevard became loosely associated by their like-minded ideas in the 1960s.  Primarily identified as Kabakov, [[Eduard Steinberg]], [[Erik Bulatov]], [[Viktor Pivovarov]] and [[Vladimir Yankilevsky]], the group also included [[Oleg Vassiliev (painter)|Oleg Vassiliev]], [[Ülo Sooster]] and others with the same pre-occupation.  The artist's studios were also used as venues to show and exchange ideas about unofficial art.  The majority of visual artists who became part of the 
[[Soviet Nonconformist Art|'Sretensky Boulevard Group']] worked officially as book illustrators and graphic designers. They were in strong contrast to a group called the [[Lianozovo]] artists, a loose group around [[Oscar Rabin (artist)|Oscar Rabin]], who were primarily abstractionists.  This group in particular was often harassed and in some cases imprisoned or exiled.  It is apparent that Kabakov and his associates were conformist as a survival strategy, a tactic which began at the art academies. Kabakov reports that during school and throughout his early care(contracted; show full)[[Category:American installation artists]]
[[Category:American contemporary artists]]
[[Category:Foreign Members of the Russian Academy of Arts]]
[[Category:Soviet people of Jewish descent]]
[[Category:People from Dnipro]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Members of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts]]
[[Category:Russian contemporary artists]]