An illustrated study of one of Ilya Kabakov's most fantastic
installations.
The fictitious hero of this 1984 installation is a lonely dreamer who
develops an impossible project: to fly alone in cosmic space. But this
dream is also an individual appropriation of a collective Soviet project
and the official Soviet propaganda connected to it. Having built a
makeshift slingshot, the hero apparently flies through the ceiling of
his shabby room and vanishes into space. The miserable room and the
primitive slingshot suggest the reality behind the Soviet utopia, in
which where cosmic vision and the political project of the Communist
revolution are seen as indissoluble.
The Man who Flew into Space from His Apartment also raises questions
of authorship in modernity. All of Kabakov's work is made in the name of
other, fictitious artists. This reveals a hidden rule of the modern art
system: only an artist who doesn't want to be an artist or who doesn't
even know that he is an artist is a real artist--just as only an artwork
that does not look like an artwork is a real artwork. The installation
is a narrative, the documentation of a fictitious event.
Afterall Books are distributed by The MIT Press.