The Russian Experiment in Art, 1863-1922

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H. N. Abrams, 1971 - Art - 296 pages
This is the first book to examine the Russian contribution to what we now call the modern movement in art and architecture. It reveals an activity and achievement which have hitherto been almost unknown and unrecognized, but which are now shown to be of the greatest importance. The author has tracked down periodicals, exhibition catalogues, and other documents which are now very rare, and out of them has reconstructed the record of her period. She has supported this with illustrations drawn from all the important Western collections of Russian art and also from the far more important collections in Russian museums, which have never been seen in the West. Artists like Malevich, Tatlin, Rodchenko, are now given their full stature as artists and personalities. They are also seen as powerful formative influences on the continental movements between the wars, particularly the Bauhaus. The story is exciting as well as important. From the pure aesthetic point of view it tells of historic experiments and discoveries. But its greatest interest is in its account of an attempt to integrate art with life and society - an attempt that was pursued with passionate idealism through the revolutionary years which gave the movement's protagonists such a unique opportunity. In its short-lived heyday, music, drama, poetry and all the industrial arts were embraced in an experiment which attacked at the root the problems which still concern the artist today. --from the Publisher.

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Contents

Introduction
6
CHAPTER
37
CHAPTER THREE
65
Copyright

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