Video
© Dimitri Venkov
Collection: Courtesy of the artist.
Dimitri Venkov is part of the emerging generation of politically-engaged artists in Moscow. Venkov works across the broad spectrum of film-making approaches, from cinematic to documentary, seeking to reflect the conditions of a society divided by politics, history and social conventions. His documentary I Wanted to be Happy in the USSR, follows the struggle of Guinean immigrant George Blemu, together with his Ukrainian wife Elena and their two daughters Anne and Maria in Moscow. Blemu, came to the USSR to be a medical student in 1979 under what was then the official policy of “friendships among peoples”, with the intention to settle. The dissolution of the USSR and the eventual rise of nationalist sentiments in Russia led to an increase of hate speech and violence towards non-Russians. For Blemu and his family, violence and hostility became everyday experiences, even being stabbed by the police, or in the case of their daughter Maria, physically attacked within the care of the school. Under these unliveable circumstances, Blemu and his family had no option but to leave, and following advice, they eventually travel to Norway under a tourist visa, seeking asylum. Blemu’s story is testimony to conditions in Russia today, where those who don’t fit the image of national monoculture, struggle to survive in the daily presence of violence.
Add to your list>Dimitri Venkov, I wanted to be Happy in the USSR, 2007-2020 (still from the video)
>Dimitri Venkov, I wanted to be Happy in the USSR, 2007-2020 (still from the video)
> Dimitri Venkov.
> Exhibition: MONOCULTURE | A Recent History. M HKA, Antwerpen, 25 September 2020 - 25 April 2021.
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> Ensemble: MONOCULTURE - ARTWORKS.
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> Ensemble: MIGRATION.
>Two Universities. An Account of the Life and Work of Lumumba Friendship University and Moscow State University, 1963.Leaflet.
>Circus, 1936.Postcard, 14.2 x 9.4 cm.