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Aleksandr Rodchenko

NEO-IMPRESSIONISM | HENRI MATISSE | PABLO PICASSO | EXPRESSIONISM | SALVADOR DALI | SCHOOL OF PARIS | AMEDEO MODIGLIANI | TSUGUHARU FUJITA | SOCIAL REALISM | ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM |


 

born Nov. 23 [Dec. 5, New Style], 1891, St. Petersburg, Russia

died Dec. 3, 1956, Moscow, Russia, U.S.S.R.

 

Soviet painter, sculptor, designer, and photographer, an important member of the Constructivist movement.

 

Rodchenko studied art at the Kazan School of Art in Odessa from 1910 to 1914 and then went to Moscow. He soon abandoned a Futurist style of painting in favour of a completely abstract, highly geometric style using a ruler and compass. His first major show was part of an exhibition organized in Moscow in 1916 by Vladimir Tatlin, and in 1918 Rodchenko presented a one-man show in Moscow. In the latter year he painted a series of black-on-black geometric paintings in response to the famous “White on White” painting of his rival, Kazimir Malevich. In 1919 Rodchenko began to make three-dimensional constructions out of wood, metal, and other materials, again using geometric shapes in dynamic compositions; some of these hanging sculptures were, in effect, mobiles.

 

Rodchenko led a wing of artists in the Constructivist movement—the Productivist group—who wanted to forge closer ties between the arts and industry and to produce works that they considered more appropriate in the daily lives of worker-consumers. He thus renounced easel painting in the 1920s and took up other art forms, among them photography; poster, book, and typographic design; furniture design; and stage and motion-picture set design. He held various government offices concerned with art-related projects, helped to establish art museums, and taught art.

 

 

EL LISSITZKY

 

born Nov. 10 [Nov. 22, New Style], 1890, Pochinok, near Smolensk, Russia

died Dec. 30, 1941, Moscow

 

in full Lazar Markovich Lisitsky, Russian painter, typographer, and designer, a pioneer of non-representational art in the early 20th century. His innovations in typography, advertising, and exhibition design were particularly influential.

 

Lissitzky studied architecture at Darmstadt, Germany., and, during World War I, at Moscow. In 1919 Marc Chagall appointed him teacher at the revolutionary school of art in Vitebsk. Kasimir Malevich, the painter and founder of the Suprematist movement, which advocated the supremacy of pure geometric form over representation, also taught there, and he greatly influenced Lissitzky. In 1919 Lissitzky began to work on a series of abstract geometric paintings that he named “Proun,”an acronym for the Russian words translated as “Projects for the Affirmation of the New.” These paintings were a major contribution to the Constructivist art movement. In 1921 he became professor at the state art school in Moscow, but he left his country at year's end, when the Soviet government turned against modern art. He went to Germany, where he met the artist-designer László Moholy-Nagy, who transmitted Lissitzky's ideas on art to western Europe and the United States through his teaching at the Bauhaus.

 

Between 1925 and 1928 Lissitzky lived in Hannover, where he cofounded a number of periodicals propagating the most progressive artistic tendencies of the 1920s. In the winter of 1928–29 he returned to Moscow, where he continued to be an innovative force. His experiments in spatial construction led him to devise new techniques in exhibiting, printing, photomontage, and architecture, which have had much influence in western Europe.

 

 


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