Moscow's master of the art of words
Charles Bernstein
Fifty Drops of Blood
Dmitri Prigov
Translated by Christopher Mattison
January 2004
The first edition of Dmitry Aleksandrovich Prigov’s 50 Drops of Blood was published in Moscow in 1993, in a volume that also contained his series “In the Sense of” and nearly three dozen sketches linked to the two discrete poetic cycles. This series is composed of 44 free verse poems ranging from four to seven lines that each contain some iteration of the phrase “drop of blood.” The inherently absorbent medium of the book form presents readers with snapshots of Prigov’s conceptual roadmap of Russian history, socio-political machinations and, as is often the case with his writing, language considering language. Originally trained as a sculptor at the Stroganov Institute, Prigov’s work in the written word—“Texts” (as he referred to them)—involved constructing objects from language while simultaneously dismantling the stifling and toxic ideologies of the Soviet state.
EEPS #4 (1st edition) and #46 (2nd edition).
About the Author
Dmitri Alexandrovich Prigov (1940-2007) is one of the most important figures in the literary history of the late Soviet and early post-Soviet era, and is considered one of the founders of Moscow Conceptualism. Prigov was a prolific writer, in all genres, as well as an accomplished visual artist. However, almost until the collapse of the Soviet Union, his writing circulated solely in unofficial samizdat editions and overseas publications. In 1986, he was briefly detained in a Soviet psychiatric hospital, but was released after protests from establishment literary figures. With the onset of glasnost and perestroika, he was able to publish and show his visual art in “official” venues, and also exhibited his art outside of Russia. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, his work was acknowledged with several awards, including, in 2002, the Boris Pasternak prize. He acted in films, traveled widely with performances, readings, and exhibits of his work, and often collaborated with younger artists. Prigov died, in Moscow, of a heart attack in 2007. His collected works, edited by Mark Lipovetsky, are published in Russia by Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie.
Praise
Dmitri Prigov re-imagines the blood of the poet within a startling series of conceptual vignettes that reveal the structures of adjacency and the possibilities of combination. Moscow's master of the art of words hits the American ground in leaps and bounds.
Charles Bernstein
About the Translator
Christopher Mattison is a recent graduate of the MFA Program in Literary Translation at the University of Iowa. He is a translator, primarily from Russian, and managing editor of the journal Exchanges.
In the News
Links
Ron Silliman on Prigov’s Fifty Drops of Blood
Prigov’s artist profile on Moscow Art
Prigov’s artist profile on Saatchi Gallery
Article on Prigov on Open Democracy
Article on Prigov in Post Colonial Europe
Article on Prigov in Calvert Journal
Article on Prigov in The New York Times
Prigov’s performance at Dickinson College
Prigov’s performance of 49th Alphabet with Vladimir Tarasov
Pussy Riot cites Prigov in their protest at the World Cup Final 2018
Publication Details
ISBN: 978-0-972768-45-0
Trade Paperback
Perfect-bound. 108 pp, 5 x 6.5 in
Publication Date: January 01 2004
Distribution: SPD
Series: Eastern European Poets Series #4