21
June 2027

Cosmonauts & Cotton Pickers

The Arts Society Bowdon
Monday, June 21, 2027 - 13:45
The Bowdon Rooms
The Firs Bowdon WA14 2TQ
Online Event

Follow the birth of the mosaic from its roots in Islamic mosaics and into Communist propagandist posters.  

 

Cosmonauts & Cotton Pickers - Soviet Central Asian Mosaics & The Use Of Public Art As Propaganda

This lecture explores the birth of the mosaic from its roots in Islamic mosaics and Communist propagandist posters through to the question of preservation in post-Soviet Central Asia. 

We explore why Soviet thinking was so keen to bring art out of galleries and into public spaces, and how, in an era when Socialist Realism was the only permitted artistic expression, every public artwork came with a message, a value and an agenda.

How did Soviet artists deal with the uncomfortable reality that Muslim Central Asia was a Russian colonial conquest?

THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Mr Chris Aslan

Chris Aslan was born in Turkey (hence the name Aslan) and spent his childhood there and in war-torn Beirut. After school, Chris spent two years at sea before studying Media and journalism at Leicester University. He then moved to Khiva, a desert oasis in Uzbekistan, establishing a UNESCO workshop reviving fifteenth century carpet designs and embroideries, and becoming the largest non-government employer in town. He was kicked out as part of an anti-Western purge, and took a year in Cambridge to write A Carpet Ride to Khiva. Chris then spent several years in the Pamirs mountains of Tajikistan, training yak herders to comb their yaks for their cashmere-like down. Next came a couple more years in Kyrgyzstan living in the world’s largest natural walnut forest and establishing a wood-carving workshop. Since then, Chris has studied and rowed at Oxford, and is now based in Cambridge, but with plans to move to North Cyprus. When he’s not lecturing for The Arts Society, he writes. His latest book, Unravelling the Silk Road, is published by Icon Books. Chris also takes tours to Central Asia, returning whenever he can, having left a large chunk of his heart out there.