Berliner Boersenzeitung - Cold shoulder for Russian artists sparks debate over cultural boycotts

EUR -
AED 4.196967
AFN 79.985973
ALL 98.560687
AMD 438.505026
ANG 2.044985
AOA 1048.382052
ARS 1354.33748
AUD 1.757038
AWG 2.058207
AZN 1.95411
BAM 1.962549
BBD 2.306111
BDT 139.571224
BGN 1.955192
BHD 0.430738
BIF 3400.05271
BMD 1.142655
BND 1.473254
BOB 7.892073
BRL 6.447432
BSD 1.142419
BTN 98.078445
BWP 15.342032
BYN 3.737822
BYR 22396.032703
BZD 2.29427
CAD 1.561107
CDF 3273.705765
CHF 0.934109
CLF 0.027892
CLP 1070.325458
CNY 8.232026
CNH 8.193366
COP 4698.596249
CRC 580.892677
CUC 1.142655
CUP 30.28035
CVE 110.646009
CZK 24.808065
DJF 203.072433
DKK 7.458074
DOP 67.441053
DZD 150.390274
EGP 56.745486
ERN 17.139821
ETB 155.975052
FJD 2.56726
FKP 0.845153
GBP 0.842428
GEL 3.130757
GGP 0.845153
GHS 11.709167
GIP 0.845153
GMD 82.271325
GNF 9899.130958
GTQ 8.777263
GYD 238.951784
HKD 8.965812
HNL 29.758473
HRK 7.534096
HTG 149.422575
HUF 403.369727
IDR 18619.444556
ILS 3.984157
IMP 0.845153
INR 98.114905
IQD 1496.252343
IRR 48134.330327
ISK 144.614614
JEP 0.845153
JMD 182.186562
JOD 0.810165
JPY 163.099094
KES 147.97165
KGS 99.925352
KHR 4590.618543
KMF 492.484399
KPW 1028.349801
KRW 1557.804456
KWD 0.349972
KYD 0.95179
KZT 582.919631
LAK 24681.341724
LBP 102381.863644
LKR 341.845649
LRD 226.98846
LSL 20.793886
LTL 3.373962
LVL 0.69118
LYD 6.231431
MAD 10.508833
MDL 19.714144
MGA 5197.830487
MKD 61.515295
MMK 2399.063609
MNT 4085.708111
MOP 9.231892
MRU 45.240985
MUR 52.336543
MVR 17.665505
MWK 1982.505831
MXN 21.92679
MYR 4.852831
MZN 73.141493
NAD 20.79361
NGN 1804.994379
NIO 42.034562
NOK 11.528723
NPR 156.92669
NZD 1.892988
OMR 0.439341
PAB 1.142118
PEN 4.138569
PGK 4.763424
PHP 63.679577
PKR 322.229888
PLN 4.280579
PYG 9126.426836
QAR 4.16434
RON 5.052928
RSD 117.222644
RUB 90.554173
RWF 1616.086205
SAR 4.285561
SBD 9.542044
SCR 16.50813
SDG 686.169042
SEK 10.930789
SGD 1.468831
SHP 0.897947
SLE 25.960665
SLL 23960.898599
SOS 653.030622
SRD 42.335244
STD 23650.645895
SVC 9.993456
SYP 14856.63475
SZL 20.365862
THB 37.204951
TJS 11.307386
TMT 4.005005
TND 3.405111
TOP 2.676215
TRY 44.754741
TTD 7.740553
TWD 34.219033
TZS 3065.975754
UAH 47.345928
UGX 4159.267832
USD 1.142655
UYU 47.624202
UZS 14685.634219
VES 108.37683
VND 29805.00597
VUV 137.780473
WST 3.141741
XAF 658.226482
XAG 0.033105
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.088081
XDR 0.81904
XOF 658.223592
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.636132
ZAR 20.347379
ZMK 10285.262162
ZMW 29.496183
ZWL 367.934357
  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    67.5

    -2.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.1150

    12.15

    +0.95%

  • CMSC

    0.0899

    22.2

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0587

    22.21

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    10.37

    -1.54%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    71.05

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.3000

    58.55

    -0.51%

  • GSK

    0.3300

    40.8

    +0.81%

  • AZN

    1.1800

    73

    +1.62%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    10.26

    -0.44%

  • RELX

    0.2950

    54.36

    +0.54%

  • BCC

    -0.0050

    87.54

    -0.01%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.94

    -0.31%

  • BP

    -0.6350

    28.92

    -2.2%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.96

    +0.05%

  • BTI

    -0.1750

    46.17

    -0.38%

Cold shoulder for Russian artists sparks debate over cultural boycotts
Cold shoulder for Russian artists sparks debate over cultural boycotts

Cold shoulder for Russian artists sparks debate over cultural boycotts

As Moscow's invasion of Ukraine enters its third week, a pall has fallen over Russian artists, long crown jewels of a country whose fine arts are an eminent source of soft power.

Text size:

Superstar operatic soprano Anna Netrebko and renowned conductor Valery Gergiev are among the luminaries axed from performing on the global stages they have long graced -- but do cultural boycotts work?

The freezing out of artists who have espoused pro-Kremlin views -- or who receive funding from the Russian state -- recalls similar measures taken over apartheid-era South Africa or against Israeli institutions in solidarity with Palestinians as part of the BDS movement.

Jane Duncan of the University of Johannesburg, who has studied the power of such boycotts as political change agents, said isolation campaigns based on culture as well as sports can be "highly effective, because they can have a huge psychological impact."

"Russia over a number of centuries now has prided itself on its intellectual, artistic and sporting achievements. It's become part and parcel of its identity and its projection of soft power globally," the academic told AFP.

"I think we've already seen that there's a lot of dissent within Russia about the invasion of Ukraine, and a cultural boycott may well intensify that."

Duncan cautioned, however, that a "blanket cultural boycott" could hurt anti-regime artists: in early 1980s South Africa, for example, she said, a form of "double censorship" emerged, where both the apartheid state and "artists who came from the liberation movements" were subject to shunning.

"That led to a situation where you couldn't actually hear the voices of the oppressed and the exploited expressed through art, through music, through drama, because they weren't allowed outside of the country."

Emilia Kabakov, a multidisciplinary Ukrainian artist who has lived and worked with her husband Ilya in New York for decades, warned against punishing creatives -- and anyone -- simply on the basis of nationality.

"I know that Russian artists right now have problems," the 76-year-old born in the Soviet city of Dnipropetrovsk, now known as Dnipro in Ukraine, told AFP.

But she suggested those Russians who live and work abroad may have a reason, saying: "Did anybody think, why are they here? Because they can't live there... they want a normal life, unrestricted."

"You don't have to work with collaborationists, but you have to work with Russians, and Ukrainians, and everybody else."

- Where is the line? -

The stance Kabakov evoked is the approach Duncan deemed appropriate -- to "steer clear" of boycotts based purely on nationality that "could lead to a very dark and difficult place."

The scholar pointed to the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement as having a "much more sophisticated position on the cultural boycott" than was the original case in South Africa, promoting a selective rather than blanket ban.

Queried by AFP, the cultural and academic boycott arm of the BDS movement said in a statement the measures they advocate for are "strictly institutional" and do "not target individuals."

Leaders of major cultural institutions including New York's Metropolitan Opera, Paris' Philharmonic, and other European venues in recent weeks have said the scope of their boycott is focused on artists who back Russian President Vladimir Putin, not everyone with a Russian passport.

"If somebody is a tool of the state, they probably won't be working with the New York Philharmonic," the orchestra's CEO Deborah Borda told AFP.

"There is a line that is very clear," said French Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot. "We don't want to see representatives of Russian institutions or artists who clearly support Vladimir Putin."

But in cases elsewhere, critics fear that line is blurred: the Polish Opera scrapped its production of Mussorgsky's 19th century opera Boris Godunov, and the Zagreb Philharmonic cut two Tchaikovsky compositions from a performance.

Dostoevsky began trending after a Milan university tried to postpone a course about the classic Russian novelist behind "Crime and Punishment" -- who spent four years in a Siberian labor camp after reading banned books in Tsarist Russia.

The university backtracked following the social media uproar.

- 'Cancel culture' -

When it comes to contemporary artists' political responsibility, Duncan said "one can make the argument that producing the art and getting it out there is stance enough."

"We also want to avoid putting artists on the spot to make political statements when perhaps they don't feel comfortable with doing that," she continued.

Feeling pressure to speak out on Putin's war in Ukraine, Russian conductor Tugan Sokhiev left his posts at Moscow's Bolshoi and with the orchestra of Toulouse.

In a lengthy statement, Sokhiev said he "will always be against any conflicts in any shape or form" but said he felt "forced to face the impossible option of choosing between my beloved Russian and beloved French musicians" -- so he quit both.

Saying he and colleagues were "victims" of "cancel culture," the conductor insisted "we musicians are the ambassadors of peace."

"Instead of using us and our music to unite nations and people, we are being divided and ostracized," he said.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)