Ilya Kabakov
(30.10.1933 – 27.04.1923)
Russian-born draftsman, painter, and conceptual artist Ilya Kabakov creates work that invokes a broad range of human experience, notably that associated with the artist’s own personal history in the post-Stalin Soviet Union. The forms and materials in Kabakov’s work are often symbolic, as in “The Russia Series” (1969), a group of paintings in sandy brown, a color Kabakov supposes would result from the mixing of Russia’s official state color, red, with the sort of bland gray he ascribes to the Soviet Union’s government dominance and generally uniform character.
Kabakov’s larger projects are often produced collaboratively with his wife Emilia, and typically comprise of multiple stages, including what he describes as a performative final step when the project is realized, as in The Ship of Siwa (2005), in which a group of children were directed to build a ship according to ancient Egyptian specifications.
Kabakov's Beetle ($5.8 million, 2008) and The VIP Hotel Room ($4.1 million, 2006) are the two most expensive pieces of contemporary Russian art ever sold (both Phillips de Pury, London) .