In the late 1950s, Kosolapov attended the school of the
Surikov Moscow Art Institute. Amongst his classmates were
Leonid Sokov and
Alexander Yulikov. After his
emigration, the artist played a critical role in assisting in the gathering of materials and clandestine distribution of the unofficial Soviet art magazine
A-YA, edited by fellow Russian emigre
Igor Chelkovski. Notable artworks by Kosolapov include
Lenin Coca-Cola (1980), Molotov Cocktail (1989), Mickey Lenin (2003), and
Malevich Sold Here (1989). Since his Soviet-era canvases (one of which was displayed in
Times Square in 1982), he has produced more modern works, including Mickey Mouse sharing a conversation with Jesus, Tatlin's Tower leaning away from the clutches of a skeleton, and a Mercedes sporting an onion dome. Kosolapov’s artwork is influenced by his life in Moscow and New York City, and his criticisms of both the United States and Soviet Russia. His work addresses both American consumerism and capitalism, and the ideological practices of the Soviet Union, through use of recognizable brands and figures, politics, references of pop culture, and bright, bold colors, which are reminiscent of Soviet propaganda artwork of the late 1950’s and 1960’s. Kosolapov became interested in the visual language associated with Western contemporary art, which he encountered in magazines at the Library of Foreign Literature in Moscow. During this time, he covertly studied the works of the Russian avant-garde movement, through unauthorized visits to the Tretyakov Gallery’s storage rooms. These encounters– with both modernist experimentation, and Soviet ideological art– shaped his later interest in the crossover between official propaganda and mass-media imagery. == Sots Art ==