In
Russia, Testicle Protest Takes on Oligarchy, State Repression
Pinning
his scrotum to the ground in Red Square, a political artist makes
global headlines
11
November, 2013
Russian
performance artist and political activist Pyotr Pavlensky put his
balls where his convictions are on Sunday when he literally nailed
his scrotum to the cobble stones of Red Square in Moscow in order to
call attention to the pervasive corruption of the nation's ruling
oligarchs, a repressive "police state," and the apathy of
his fellow citizens who refuse to challenge the status quo.
In
a singular act of both self-brutalizition and political expression,
Pavlensky stripped naked, sat down in the center of the busy square,
and pinned himself to the ground with a six-inch nail.
"The
performance can be seen as a metaphor for the apathy, political
indifference and fatalism of contemporary Russian society,"
Pavlensky said in a prepared statement. "As the government turns
the country into one big prison, stealing from the people and using
the money to grow and enrich the police apparatus and other
repressive structures, society is allowing this, and forgetting its
numerical advantage, is bringing the triumph of the police state
closer by its inaction."
Pavlensky
remained seated motionless as Russian police first covered him with a
jacket and then later removed him from the square.
As
the Indepedent reports, figures from across the Russian arts world
praised the performance, with one calling it “a manifesto of
powerlessness”.
Though
most available footage of the act censored the details, the original
video as well as Pavlensky's public statement were posted to the
Russian website Grani.ru [warning: graphic]. For a scaled back
reenactment, Live Leak.com offered this version:
The
video has since been removed - SMR
As
the video notes, this is not the first time the provocative artist
has used such methods to communicate his political message, but it is
so far the most extreme. As the Guardian also reports:
Pavlensky
has a history of self-harming art, including sewing his lips together
to protest against the jail sentences given to members of Pussy Riot
and wrapping himself in barbed wire outside a Russian government
building, which he said symbolised "the existence of a person
inside a repressive legal system".
The
leading Russian theatre director Kirill Serebrennikov wrote on his
Facebook page that the performance was a "powerful gesture of
absolute despair".
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