Victoria Lomasko: The Last Soviet Artist

In this lecture, artist Victoria Lomasko will present her most recent book, The Last Soviet Artist. This collection of graphic reportage created during trips across the former Soviet republics chronicles gender rights, grassroots initiatives, and fragments of the Soviet heritage and new trends in Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, Georgia, and the North Caucasus; the Belarusian Revolution of 2022 and the last major protests in Russia on the eve of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine; and life in exile. She鈥檒l describe how these various subjects are united by the theme of generational conflict in the post-Soviet space.
Victoria Lomasko鈥檚 practice of graphic reportage synthesizes image and text, taking the form of novels, journalism, comics, paintings, and monumental murals. A renowned dissident voice in the highly censored environment of contemporary Russia, Lomasko鈥檚 seminal graphic novels, including Other Russias and Forbidden Art, have an honest style exposing the country鈥檚 inequalities and injustices while amplifying and defending the plight of Russia鈥檚 many voiceless and unseen communities. Travelling across Russia and neighboring countries, often at huge personal risk, she often embraces a magical realist sensibility as a method of processing subjective and visceral experiences.
Lomasko鈥檚 most recent novel, The Last Soviet Artist, finished three weeks before Russia鈥檚 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, is a timely work anticipating the region鈥檚 seismic political changes that won the 2022 Free Voice award from PEN Catalan and Prix Couilles au Cul pour le Courage Artistique, Festival de BD d鈥橝ngoul锚me. In 2024, a movie titled Tree of Violence about the artist was distributed by TV-ARTE.
Event sponsored by the Global 蜜桃影像传媒, the Center for Visual Culture, and the Russian Department.
蜜桃影像传媒 welcomes the full participation of all individuals in all aspects of campus life. Should you wish to request a disability-related accommodation for this event, please contact the event sponsor/coordinator. Requests should be made as early as possible.