press release

Opening: 2 April 2009, 19.00

Sergei Eisenstein (1898– 948) was a seminal modern artist and legendary pioneer of cinema. The director of masterpieces such as 'Battleship Potemkin' (1927) and 'Ivan the Terrible' (1941), he was also a major art theorist, whose ideas on 'intellectual montage', for instance, created a milestone in the theory of cinema and in revolutionary art. Eisenstein also made intensive use throughout his life of the medium of drawing, often in close connection with, or literally as part of, his theoretical reflections.

Yet despite Eisenstein's enormous influence on 20th century culture, many of his texts have not yet been translated from Russian into other languages, and large parts of his vast body of writings have to date remained unpublished. Similarly, his extensive oeuvre of drawings has only been presented on rare occasions.

The exhibition in Extra City brings together an extensive selection of drawings of the Russian State Archives of Literature and Art in Moscow (RGALI) made by Eisenstein during his visit to Mexico in 1931/32, including works never before presented in public. In Mexico, Eisenstein developed his drawings in a parallel manner to the Surrealists' Ecriture Automatique, producing a large number of variations on recurring motifs, merging archaic and modern myths, exploring obscenity, violence, and forms of ecstasy through a single, amorphous line.

The exhibition will further include short excerpts from the unfinished 'Que viva México!', the film Eisenstein came to shoot in Mexico, and which he would tragically be excluded from editing. The film's hybrid images depict Mexican life as a simultaneity of past and present. Reminiscent of, and yet surpassing the modern 'primitivist' fascination with the 'archaic', Mexico presented for Eisenstein a tableau of dialectic imagery that allowed him to re-conceptualize the role of modern art and revolutionary cinema in traversing the modern dichotomies of subject and object, rational and irrational, inside and outside, individual and collective, and even death and life.

Further to this we will be presenting the recent publication of Eisenstein's monumental, uncompleted book: 'Method'. Eisenstein conceived this work as being three-dimensional, which he imagined taking a spherical rather than a linear form. The 1.700 pages of text, drawings and notes, oscillating between Russian, English, French, German and Spanish, are being published in a four-volume edition edited by Oksana Bulgakowa for Potemkin Press (Berlin/San Francisco, 2009).

'Sergei Eisenstein: The Mexican Drawings' is conceived as an introduction to the thematic project 'Animism', planned for 2010 at MuHKA and Extra City, which addresses the dialectics of subjectification and objectification, mummification and animation, in contemporary art practices.

Curated by Oksana Bulgakowa and Anselm Franke. Exhibition architecture by Guy Châtel (ssa/xx-architecten).

With the support of the Russian State Archives of Literature and Art and the Ford Foundation, Moscow.

only in german

Sergej Eisenstein
The Mexican Drawings

Kuratoren: Oksana Bulgakowa, Anselm Franke