Filed Under: Topic > Contemporary Art > Novikov and Afrika Come Out

Novikov and Afrika Come Out

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Although the artist Timur Novikov (1958-2002) imbued his New Academy with aesthetic, ethical, and political conservatism, both the Academy and Novikov’s public persona exhibited camp and queer dimensions. Novikov himself was gay (or at least bisexual), as were many other members of the group, making the New Academy an early, complex example of a specifically post-Soviet queer culture and aesthetics. However, neither Novikov nor the other neo-academists spoke openly about their sexuality or the role it played in their art. And when they did address it, they did so in an excessive, provocative, or even shockingly vulgar way. This artifact is a case in point. Here, Novikov is interviewed alongside another prominent representative of the New Academy, Sergey “Afrika” Bugaev (1966-), who became famous in the mid-1980s for his starring role in the cult movie ASSA. In the interview, Novikov uses a graphic and unnecessarily detailed prison rape metaphor to describe the “debasement” (opuskanie) of the avant-garde. Afrika, for his part, claims that Novikov was acquainted with New York gay culture “on a 20-centimeter basis.” Both Novikov and Bugaev call themselves “faggots” (pederasty), contrasting the fundamental “femininity” of the New Academy with the “masculinity” of the Moscow Conceptualists, their main rivals in the field of contemporary Russian art. Queerness, while remaining undefined, is thus a key feature within the New Academy. A queer sensibility, both in the form of fluid sexuality, but also as an aesthetic and ideological “shimmering”—an oscillation between irony or detachment and sincerity, or a refusal to be confined to one set of ideologies or cultural conventions—was crucial to the New Academy’s artistic strategy. Novikov’s provocative refusal to accept any fixed labels or identity, and even his specific form of “queer nationalism,” was common among prominent post-Soviet gay and lesbian (or gay-and-lesbian-adjacent) figures like artist Slava Mogutin (1974-), NBP founder Eduard Limonov (1943-2020), and activist (and onetime spouse of far-right philosopher Alexander Dugin) Evgenia Debryanskaya (1953). From a presentist, Western perspective, such a position has been critiqued as inappropriate, non-inclusive, essentialist, and the product of a closeted, highly homophobic culture. At the same time, Novikov’s aesthetics and vision are highly original and had a longstanding impact on Russian art, fashion, and popular culture. The queer nationalism or “queer totalitarianism” he advanced may have been a reaction to calls to adopt neoliberal cultural standards and norms of behavior—markers of identity that many post-Soviet Russians perceived as oppressive expressions of cultural, economic, and political colonialism.