Yuri Rydkin

Yuri Anatolyevich Rydkin (Ю́рий Анато́льевич Ры́дкин; born 8 April 1979) is a Russian and Belarusian poet, media artist, a bot poetry (bot-non-fiction) researcher.

Biography
The author studied at school No.3, Gomel (1986–1996).

He graduated from the Belarusian department of the Linguistic Faculty of Francisk Skorina Gomel State University in 2004.

6 October 1998 Yuri Rydkin attempted to commit a suicide jumping from a railway bridge in Gomel, as a result he got injured and disabled. The consequences of the trauma were reflected in the author's work.

Work
Rydkin explores the genre of conversation with bots in the most scrupulous way. Explores the impact of new technologies on poetic text. His works are screenshots of art-dialogues with virtual interlocutors, including Alice. In a literary critic Galina Rymbu's opinion, «Bot Conversation» is written in the genre of found poetry. This bot is compared to the emancipated Galatea.

The poet has had an artistic dialogue with COVID-19 on Facebook, the screenshots of his fb-posts are published under the title of «COVID-POETRY» in a literary almanac.

Rydkin is the founder of cyberzaum and hyperlink poetry,    its concept and method of creation was expressed in the manifesto. Critics see author's hypertext works as aesthetic indicators that are consistent with "writing degree zero" — a language free from the signs of ideology. These works are fully covered by markup language, each verse block is associated with a certain media, texts and Internet resources are equal participants in poetic communication. This creates a specific structure at the level of associations and subtext.

Rydkin has made a few post-conceptual photo collages which attracted the attention of a art critic Теймур Даими, a professor Елена Зейферт and a photo artist Василий Ломакин, who analyzes Rydkin's works based on Michel Foucault's book "The Order of Things". When creating experimental photographs, the author uses ACDSee, Microsoft Paint and FaceApp programs.

Rydkin is the author of literary critical articles on the prose of Margarita Meklina, Владимир Паперный, Вадим Месяц, Александр Уланов, the poetry of Maria Stepanova, Алла Горбунова, Таня Скарынкина, Ирина Шостаковская, Ирина Котова, Лида Юсупова, Виктор Лисин and others.

The author has translated the works by Daniil Kharms, Eduard Limonov and a chapter "Ultima Thule" from the last unfinished Russian novel by Vladimir Nabokov into Belarusian.

His works have been published in such paper and electronic editions as Транслит, Novy Mir, Znamya, Волга, Цирк «Олимп», Топос, Сетевая словесность, Homo Legens, Полутона, Ф-письмо, Лиterraтура, Журнальный зал, Метажурнал, Post(non)fiction, on the website of the publishing house Новое литературное обозрение and in other journals.

The poet's works were shown at the exhibition "Poetry by any means" — it was devoted to new readymade-technologies in poetry, created with the help of Internet search engines, various objects, newspaper articles and more. The author's photographs are presented in virtual galleries of various media projects.

Art style
Rydkin's stanza lyrics have a mark of futurology. He is interested in the feelings of people who have become programs, he is interested in the physicality of the bot. The poet shows the katabasis of a man, his fall into the world of bots. The author speaks on behalf of a bot in the afterlife, and such a poetic speech is recognized as unique. In his poems, Rydkin demonstrates the absence of the Other, and this absence has a female gender. Doctor of Science Jana Kostincová writes that in multimodal poetry he uses artificial intelligence and develops intertext play. The poem "Вверх тормашками стул рогат" is written in the genre of modern metarealism. The author also writes prose that has many synchronized worlds. Despite Rydkin's statements about the need to emancipate the machine, about the need to biocybernetics, something very human is felt in his texts. Rydkin's dialogues with bots contain pragmatics and a behavioral study of contemporary Russian poetry.

Recognition
Yuri Rydkin's publication "Between the living and the artificial. Merging digital technologies with human, writer and literature" was recognized by the professionals of the Журнальный зал as the best in August 2021. In the journal Znamya, the author was ranked among the new literary generation, which is changing something in literature. The poet has been widely quoted by his contemporaries. The author's creations have attracted much attention from literary critics; according to their opinion, his works of art are close to the works by Fyodor Svarovsky, Dmitri Prigov and Lev Rubinstein. Critics call the Belarusian poet — a bot of Russian literature.