russian avant

7
Russian avant-garde Kazimir Malevich, Black Square, 1915 Alexander Rodchenko, Dance. An Objectless Composition, 1915

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Ilya Golosov, Zuev Club, 1926

Melnikov House, Moscow, 1929

The Russian avant-garde is an umbrella term used to define the large, influential wave of

modern art that flourished in Russia (or more accurately, the Russian Empire and the Soviet

Union) approximately 1890 to 1930 - although some place its beginning as early as 1850 and its

end as late as 1960. The term covers many separate, but inextricably related, art movements that

occurred at the time; namely Neo-primitivism, suprematism, constructivism, and futurism. Given

that many of these avant-garde artists were born or grew up in what is present day Belarus and

Ukraine (including Kazimir Malevich, Aleksandra Ekster, Vladimir Tatlin, Wassily Kandinsky,

David Burliuk, Alexander Archipenko), some sources also talk about Ukrainian avant-garde.

The Russian avant-garde reached its creative and popular height in the period between the

Russian Revolution of 1917 and 1932, at which point the ideas of the avant-garde clashed with

the newly emerged state-sponsored direction of Socialist Realism. Notable figures from this era

include:

Contents

1 Artists and Designers

2 Journals

3 Filmmakers

4 Writers

5 Theatre Directors

6 Architects

7 Composers

8 Main Articles

9 External links

10 References

Artists and Designers

Nathan Altman

Alexander Archipenko

Vladimir Baranoff-Rossine

Alexander Bogomazov

David Burliuk

Vladimir Burliuk

Marc Chagall

Ilya Chashnik

Aleksandra Ekster

Robert Falk

Pavel Filonov

Naum Gabo

Nina Genke-Meller

Natalia Goncharova

Mikhail Larionov

Michail Grobman

Francisco Infante-Arana

Wassily Kandinsky

Ivan Kliun

Gustav Klutsis

Aristarkh Lentulov

El Lissitzky

Kazimir Malevich

Paul Mansouroff

Mikhail Matyushin

Vadim Meller

Solomon Nikritin

Liubov Popova

Ivan Puni

Kliment Red'ko

Alexei Remizov

Alexander Rodchenko

Olga Rozanova

Léopold Survage

Varvara Stepanova

Georgii and Vladimir Stenberg

Vladimir Tatlin

Vasiliy Yermilov

Nadezhda Udaltsova

Alexandr Zhdanov

Journals

LEF

Mir iskusstva

Filmmakers

Alexander Dovzhenko

Dziga Vertov

Grigori Aleksandrov

Lev Kuleshov

Sergei Eisenstein

Vsevolod Pudovkin

Writers

Velimir Khlebnikov

Vladimir Mayakovsky

Sergei Tretyakov

Alexei Remizov

Theatre Directors

Vsevolod Meyerhold

Nikolai Evreinov

Yevgeny Vakhtangov

Sergei Eisenstein

Architects

Yakov Chernikhov

Moisei Ginzburg

Ilya Golosov

Ivan Leonidov

Konstantin Melnikov

Vladimir Shukhov

Alexander Vesnin

Preserving Russian avant-garde architecture has become a real concern for historians, politicians

and architects. In 2007, the Modern Museum of Art MoMA in New York, devoted an exhibition

entirely to the *Lost Vanguard: Soviet Architecture, featuring the work of American

Photographer Richard Pare.

Composers

Samuil Feinberg

Arthur Lourié

Nikolai Medtner

Alexander Mossolov

Nikolai Borissovitch Obuchov

Nikolai Roslavets

Leonid Sabaneyev

Alexander Scriabin

Many Russian composers that were interested in avant-garde music became members of the

Association for Contemporary Music which was headed by Roslavets.

Main Articles

Constructivism

VKhUTEMAS

Russian Futurism

Cubo-Futurism

Suprematism

Constructivist architecture

Soviet art

Avant-garde

Russian Symbolism

External links

Why did Soviet Photographic Avant-garde decline?

The Russian Avant-garde Foundation

Thessaloniki State Museum of Contemporary Art - Costakis Collection

Yiddish Book Collection of the Russian Avant-Garde at the Beinecke Rare Book and

Manuscript Library at Yale University

International campaign to save the Shukhov Tower in Moscow

Masters of Russian Avant-garde

References

Friedman, Julia. Beyond Symbolism and Surrealism: Alexei Remizov's Synthetic Art,

Northwestern University Press, 2010. ISBN 0-8101-2617-6 (Trade Cloth)

Russian avant-garde - video

Kovalenko, G.F. (ed.) The Russian Avant-Garde of 1910-1920 and Issues of

Expressionism. Moscow: Nauka, 2003.

Shishanov V.A. Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art: a history of creation and a collection.

1918-1941. - Minsk: Medisont, 2007. - 144 p.[1]