A-YA

A-YA
Cover #4
Editors-in-Chief Alexander Sidorov, Igor Shelkovsky
Categories Art magazines
Frequency Yearly
Circulation 7,000/3,000
Year founded 1979
Final issue 1986
Country USSR France
Language Russian English

A-YA (A-JA), Cyrillica-Я» — журнал неофициального русского искусства (English: Magazine of unofficial Russian art), was an underground Russian art revue. A-YA was a magazine illegally prepared in the Soviet Union and then published in Paris from 1979 to 1986.

The editors were Alexander Sidorov (under the pseudonym «Alexej Alexejev») in Moscow and Igor Shelkovsky in Paris. A-YA was distributed in the U.S. by Alexander Kosolapov in New York. It consisted of 60 pages in A-4 format. There were 3000 edition copies (the first edition numbered 7000). A-YA was printed in both color and black-and-white.

An informal magazine, A-YA opened to the world the virtually unknown-to-the-public contemporary Soviet art and current Russian art, which for many years was to dominate the world's leading exhibition venues and auctions. It was from A-YA that people first heard the names Eric Bulatov, Ilya Kabakov, Dmitry Prigov and many others.

In 2004, the entire run was reprinted as one volume by ArtChronika with a new forward by Shelkovsky as "A-YA - Unofficial Russian Art Review: 1979-1986" ( ISBN 9785902647010).

  • Margarita Masterkova (1982). "A-YA n°4 - 1982 PERFORMANCES IN MOSCOW". A-YA. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008.
  • New York Times
  • TIME Magazine
  • Sotheby's Auctions Calendar


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