Victor Sydorenko: Acquiring Subjectivity
Victor Sydorenko requires no introduction. He is a renowned Ukrainian painter, curator, professor, author of art objects and photo compositions, as well as scholarly and popular texts. Victor Sydorenko is one of the most prominent figures in contemporary Ukrainian art. His interests include the key concepts of our times: memory, post-totalitarian legacy, progressively more complicated identity constructs in the contemporary world, and humankind’s prospects in the new globalized life. His research often turns to the past too, but the artist approaches our cultural legacy outside the ideological framework, with an entire arsenal of new media.
The protagonist of the Acquiring Subjectivity project is the mysterious “new man”, a recurring character in Victor Sydorenko’s works. The Man in His Underpants undergoes metamorphoses along with the artist, transcending certain boundaries and changing compared to his earlier self.
As the title indicates, the project explores transitions that make new subjectivities emerge and take root, a topic that is very important to our society: “The issue of choice is ever relevant for our society. We still linger in the transitory state between the Soviet past and the capitalist present, equally incapable of escaping the past, which has become the subconscious of the present, and of outwitting the future. You cannot appropriate the past, it’s yours as much as anybody else’s. Therefore, self-identification, ‘the test of authenticity’, endless measuring of yourself remains relevant. The main theme I’ve been working on for many years now, exploring and developing its symbolic meanings, first emerged in the 1996 project Amnesia, which marked the first appearance of my protagonist, ‘the man in the underpants’: a half-dressed man in undergarments that men from all social classes wore here for the better part of the century. Going through a complicated process of national self-identification that, to a large degree, remains ongoing to this day, Ukraine rejected its Soviet past and tried to strike it from collective memory. And yet, the unreflected, unanalyzed experience returns to public consciousness as indelible myths and social complexes,” Victor Sydorenko explains. “We live in the era of transparency that lays illusions bare and encourages us to rethink our cultural and ideological heritage. The illusion of freedom is another beautiful illusion that got debunked. Freedom has become another abstraction that would never come