
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1994, Russian conceptual artist Oleg Kulik posed naked, pretending to be a guard dog, attacking passers by in Moscow.
He was protesting conditions in post-Soviet Russia. He claimed Russians had lost their ability to relate to each other, and were reduced to living like animals.
In this programme, first broadcast in 2014, Dina Newman speaks to Kulik about his protest performance, which made him famous around the world.
(Photo: Oleg Kulik dressed as dog on car bonnet. Credit: Oleg Kulik)
By BBC World Service4.5
898898 ratings
In 1994, Russian conceptual artist Oleg Kulik posed naked, pretending to be a guard dog, attacking passers by in Moscow.
He was protesting conditions in post-Soviet Russia. He claimed Russians had lost their ability to relate to each other, and were reduced to living like animals.
In this programme, first broadcast in 2014, Dina Newman speaks to Kulik about his protest performance, which made him famous around the world.
(Photo: Oleg Kulik dressed as dog on car bonnet. Credit: Oleg Kulik)

7,732 Listeners

368 Listeners

534 Listeners

878 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

283 Listeners

5,518 Listeners

1,810 Listeners

3,187 Listeners

1,876 Listeners

585 Listeners

520 Listeners

593 Listeners

107 Listeners

77 Listeners

4,794 Listeners

739 Listeners

248 Listeners

843 Listeners

375 Listeners

233 Listeners

327 Listeners

3,168 Listeners

64 Listeners

846 Listeners

1,001 Listeners

499 Listeners

612 Listeners

280 Listeners

276 Listeners

25 Listeners

67 Listeners

83 Listeners

1 Listeners