Friday, July 17, 2015

From Chagall to Malevich, the revolution of the avant - garde



The Grimaldi Forum Monaco will be presenting  « From  Chagall to Malevich, the revolution of the avant - garde » , exhibition July 12  - September 6, 2015  produced in connection  with the Year of Russia in the Principality of Monaco. The exhibition will be one of the  outstanding events of the Year of Russia celebration which will run through - out 2015. 

This wide - ranging exhibition will bring together major works by great artists who from 1905  to 1930 represented the avant - garde movement in Russia. They shaped an unprecedented  modernity, distinguishing themselves totally from what had been known before: Altman,  Baranoff - Rossin, Burliuk, Chagall, Chashnik, Dymch its - Tolstaya, Ender, Exter, Filonov, Gabo,  Gavris, Goncharova, Kandinsky, Kliun, Klucis, Kudryashov, Larionov, Lebedev, Lentulov,  Lissitzky, Mashkov, Malevich, Mansurov, Matiushin, Medunetsky, Mienkov, Morgunov,  Pevsner, Popova, Puni, Rodchenko, Rozanova,  Shevchenko Stenberg, Stepanova, Sterenberg,  Strzeminski, Suetin, Tatlin, Udaltsova, Yakulov.... These artists were the forerunners of the tremendous upheaval in the way of thinking about,  seeing, and representing the reality. 

If academism was still around , these young creators,  both in Moscow and in St. Petersburg, could not be satisfied with that vision of the past. The  arrival of electricity, of the railroad, of the automobile, of the new means of communication  forged a new language. The artists would impose a vision that corresponded to what was  around them, to what they were experiencing, to who they were themselves. 

New ideas  flourished. It became clear that there was no halting these great upheavals in a society that  was also insisting on change. New ways of representation, until then  unknown began to appear, and to become  inseparable from this current of modernity that expressed the impact of the discoveries  taking place in those first years of the 20th century, in literature, music, dance as well as in  plastic arts. The sounds, the words, the form jostled and turned upside down commonplace  ideas. 




Between a strait - laced,  outdated world and the innovators of this period, the gulf was  enormous. In this shaken - up world, artists developed a language that  stripped away the old  and made way for the future. Different movements emerged, outside of all convention, creating schools or movements  that illustrated the energy and wealth of creativity at the beginning of the 20th century:  Impressionism, Cubism, Futu rism, Cubo - futurism, Rayonism, Suprematism, Constructivism — movements producing new and unknown forms of representation, indelibly interwoven with  their era.  Such is the essential outline of this great story of the “avant - garde” artists who shook up  centuries of convention and academism.  





Self-Portrait with White Collar
Marc Chagall, French (born Russia), 1887 - 1985
Date:
1914


 In order to present a subject of such scope, the exhibition curator Jean - Louis Prat has  obtained important loans from major Russian institutions: the State Russian Museum in St.  Petersburg, the Pushkin Museum and the Tretyakov State Gallery in Moscow. Other great  Russian museums such as the Nizhny Novgorod, Astrakhan, Krasnodar, and Tula museums,  all of which benefited from deposits of art at the beginning of the October 1917 Revolution,  have also been contacted and have agreed to make exceptional loans. Some of the  important European museums such as the George Pompidou Center in Paris complete this  prestigious list. The exhibition will bring together 150 major works.\


The departure point of the exhibition coincides with that of the upheaval of Russian society at the beginning of the 20th century. Traditional Russia still existed; artists such as Konchalovsky, Machkov, Malevich (at the beginning of his career) were producing works in the classical style. Those artists, who were portraying a society genuinely linked to the foundation of Russian culture, intuitively sensed the profound changes to come.

This exhibition therefore begins in 1905, date of the first great change that took place in Russia’s history: the “Bloody Sunday” revolt in St. Petersburg. All these artists understood that an inevitable change in society was at hand, change that would soon lead to the 1917 October Revolution.

And in fact, the personal paths of these artists contributed to the changing spirit: they travelled abroad, they went to Paris—Baranoff-Rossin, Tatlin, Chagall and Kandinsky—they were all in quest of new ideas.

For one, Konchalovsky was very interested by the work of Derain and Vlaminck; for another, Machkov probably saw andadmired the work by Matisse. All these artists recognized the need to create a new style and these new ways of seeing becamethe very basis of this revolution—it started slowly and then became inevitable.

In contrast, other painters, writers and poets were far more advanced in their approach, fruit of the many exchanges between Russia and France. Matisse had just decorated the interior of the residence of Shchukin, a great collector who lived in Moscow. As Shchukindid with his home, so other private homes opened their doors every weekend in Moscow to display to a chosen public the works of Picasso, Braque and Gris that had been purchased in Paris by these rich industrialists.

The artists discovered and invented new forms, new colors, a new way of seeing the world. Marinetti, an Italian poet and a born revolutionary, came to give conferences in the Russian capital and sketched out what would be the very foundation of an important pictorial revolution. Art bore witness to this new world, taking into account a period, which was changing. Progress was ineluctable. It became accepted that a car could be as beautiful as a painting. And if the car is in movement, well then art can also embrace such movement. The machine inevitably creates innovation, and so new artistic schools appeared, changed by dreams and utopias.

Larionov, Goncharova and Udaltsova began to express themselves by borrowing ideas from the French Cubists. They had been to see them or seen their works exhibited in Moscow, they had sometimes worked in their studios or the work of those French artists had been acquired by Russian collectors.

Russian artists took inspiration from what they saw and in turn created an extraordinary nucleus, a genuine fermentation of new ideas leading to the founding of different artistic movements: that of Rayonism with Larionov and Goncharova, that of Futurismaround David Burliuk. For the first time, associating a fixed image from Cubism to an imagein movement from Futurism gave rise to a typically Russian movement: Cubo-Futurism.

Other artists such as Chagall, who was unconnected to any school, gave expression to other dreams. Chagall’s work spoke of tradition coming from old Russia. He painted other images, inspired by the Orient ,using other colors. His work, using themes of Jewish culture, was in a whole new style all his own and furnished a new substrata to history that was in the process of being created. The Theater of Jewish Art, painted in 1920 after the 1917 Revolution had already broken out, is a meaningful example of Chagall’s new way of representation. Chagall was named director of the Vitebsk school in 1917 and returned to the country where he was born (known now as Belorussia). He created a school there at the request of Lunacharsky, minister of culture. Naturallyhe put into practice the tenets of a new way of thinking, of seeing, of writing, of painting. He brought in other important artists who were following other artistic paths such as Lissitsky and Malevich.

Creating his own language, Malevich brought in new ideas, turning upside down the poetic vision of Chagall’s work. The Suprematist school that Malevich founded soon became an obstacle to any possible understanding with Chagall. The rupture was inevitable. Chagall left for Moscow to create the Theater of Jewish Art,t hat extraordinary place where all the great artists of his time would come to participate in exercising their arts: writers, poets, directors, actors. Chagall created his fresco, Introduction to the Theater of Jewish Art (which is eight meters long), an astounding painting that proves to what extent he remained faithful to that Russian and Jewish culture which is the very basis of his inspiration.

As for Malevich, he continued to embody a language completely opposite of Chagall’s but one just as extraordinary: he created abstract art, an artistic expression totally unknown until then and which compelled attention. And so a new school came into being--Suprematism. 

At the same time, other artists such as Tatlin created anothers chool using new materials, that of Constructivism. The exhibition of the Grimaldi Forum sheds light on this opposition and complementarity between Suprematism and Constructivism. The artists who participated in that particular part of history such as Rodchenko, Tatlin, Kliun, Rozanova, Popova and many others, participated also in that revolution of the spirit. In Russia in the twenties, the thirst for change originated in and existed side by side with the new modernity.

From the start of the Revolution, Kandinsky, who at the beginning of the 20thcentury had developed his own innovative style, was in charge of a commission to distribute to museums in the provinces the work of all those artists who were considered as revolutionaries and who worked and exhibited in Moscow and St. Petersburg. The State bought works that were sent to Rostov-sur-le Don, to Perm, to Astrakhan and Krasnodar etc....to ensure that the heart of Russia would discover the revolutionary message.

Rapidly, those in power began to distort this noble message, permeating it with ideology whose motivations did not necessarily correspond to the liberty of style of the artists. The latter finally understood that they could no longer exercise their rights as creators in an environment where ideas were being imposed upon them. Many of them left Russia beginning in the 1920s and moved to Berlin, Paris and the United States: Larionov, Goncharova, Kandinsky, Chagall, Baranoff-Rossin.

Confronted by a Russian art that had become more and more official, imposing its vision upon the artists, those who remained behind such as Malevich were “prisoners.” And so he wrote, “I prefer a sharp pento a dishevelled brush.” They would return to figurative painting, though of figuresdevoid of faces. As for Filonov, he closed himself off into a completely different language, impenetrable to any understanding by the revolutionaries in power The death of Mayakovsky in 1930, emblematic poet of the Revolution, marked the end of an exceptional and unique adventure, the end of dreams and of utopias...

The exceptional aspect of the exhibition comes from the loan of major works from Russia, works which rarely leave the national galleries: the Pushkin Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, the Russian State Museum in St. Petersburg. Of course the arrival of The Theater of Jewish Art by Marc Chagall and of its seven large panels is definitely an event, and the same can be said for the “Quadrangle”, the “Cross” and the “Circle” by Malevich. But all the works are of this quality. For this exhibition, there has been agenerous and exceptional collaboration by Russian’s prestigious institutions, not to mention the museums in the provinces whose works are mostly little seen, being rarely accessible even for the most curious of travellers! Add to that, the loans from the Pompidou Center such as the “Tower” by Tatlin, the works from the famous Costakis collection in Greece, and those from the Thyssen Museum in Madrid, and of course from many private collections.

Movements

Neo-Primitivism: Movement of Russian painting inaugurated between 1907 and 1912 by D. and V. Burliuk, Larionov, Gontcharova, which advocated a return to naïve forms of popular imagery (loubok), icons, store signs, in reaction to French painting judged to be too predominant.

Rayonism: First abstract non-figurative movement. Larionov was its creator withhis works of 1913 thatrepresent only networks of rays by which he wished to show “space between objects.” Larionov made a distinction between a “realist rayonism” and an “abstract rayonism” where the pictorial elements are orchestrated in an autonomous way without explicit reference to the object, as in Red Rayonism (the model of the functioning of music being its reference).

Cubo-Futurism: Russian pictorial movement that beginningin 1912 made the synthesis of Parisian Cubism, of Italian Futurism and of Neo-Primitivist principles. Its major representatives were Tatlin, Malevich, Olga Rozanova, Alexandra Exter, Liubov Popova.

Suprematism(Souprématizm): Name given by Malevich to his creation without-object presented at the Last Futurist Exhibition of Paintings, at Petrograd in 1915. 

Suprematism, whose emblem is the Black Quadrangle (1913) is the triumph of the pictorial in itself. On the canvases appeared minimal geometric units (cross, circles, quadrilaterals) and colored contrasts. Suprematism which was the opposite of Constructivism was considered as the most radical aesthetic revolution of the 20thcentury. The first disciples of Malevich’s Suprematism were Kliun, Mienkov, Puni, Rozanova. It was taught by Unovis, a group of artists at Vitebsk, and in Petrograd, and produced first-rate (plastic) artists: El Lissitzky, Souietine, Chashnik. In the 1920s, Suprematism extended into the field of architecture (the architectones) and to that of design.

Suprematism was also a philosophy, strictly monistic, presented in an important corpus of treaties and articles written by Malevich. With the exception of a few booklets published at Vitebsk, these texts remained unpublished until the end of the 1960s, date when Suprematism was rediscovered.Russian

Constructivism: Artistic movement originating in Soviet Russia which dominated the 1920s. Although already beginning in1921, within the framework of the Muscovite Inkhouk(institute of artistic research),the Constructivist work group had been created (Rodchenko, Medunetsky, Stepanova, Gane and G. Stenberg), but the name only appeared in public for the first time in January 1922 in a booklet entitled Constructivists that presented a exhibition by Medunetsky, and V. and G. Sternberg.

The Constructivist movement had its roots in a practice begun in the West with Cubism and Futurism and was carried on in Russia through multiple artistic experiences: Cubo-Futurism, Rayonism, Suprematism, Tatlin’s reliefs or Malevich’s research on a “constructed scenic space”, or those of Yakulov (interior decoration of the Café Pittoresque in 1917). Proclaiming the death of easel painting in favour of an industrial and constructive art, Russian Constructivism reached into all areas of the artistic environment: books, posters, furnishings, architecture, textiles, clothing, theatre....It triumphed in Berlin in 1922 with the exhibition Erste russische Kunstausstellungat the Van Diemen Gallery,and later in Paris in 1925 at the International Exposition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts
 
Typical works

 Classicism and Neo-Primitivism


Kazimir Malevich 
Self Portrait Circa 1908

Gouache and ink on paper 46,2 x 41,3 cm

State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

As 1910 dawned, Malevich, just thirty years old, abandoned his symbolist period, an important period in Russia during the last part of the 19thcentury. He painted two self-portraits, both dating from the same period, one now in the Tretyakov State Gallery in Moscow and the other belonging to the State Russian Museum. The two celebrate his convergence with the group of Russian painters known as “Jack of Diamonds” that advocated in their works Cezanne’s principles, and Fauvism during the period between 1910 and 1917.

Beyond the representation of the artist himself, we can see in this self-portrait the representation of the painter in him, bearing all the colors of the palette. Malevich wrote some ten years later, “in the artist blazes all the colors of all the tints, his brain burns, in him are ignited the rays of colors that advance clothed in the tints of nature

A typically Neo-Primitivist painting, 


Farmers Gathering Apples

by Natalia Gontcharova,



is in the continuity of the movement begun by the brothers Burliuk and Natalia Gontcharova with her companion Mikhail Larionov in the period between 1907 and 1912. This movement advocated the return to the plastic principles of popular art. The erudite perspective is replaced by expressive compositions of simplified forms that develop a trivial and provincial theme. The influence of Gauguin was one of Gontcharova’s main sources of inspiration.

Beyond the Fauve palette, with its intense and brilliant colors, one finds in the painting’s composition the sacralisation of farm work, the representation of profile “à la Egyptian” as well as the enlargement of the feet and hands, a characteristic mark of the French master. But it was in bringing to her works inspiration anchored in Russian popular art that Gontcharova rendered them profoundly remarkable.


Rayonism and Cubo-Futurism



Kazimir Malevich

Perfected Portrait of Ivan Kliun 1913

Oil on canvas 111,5 x 70,5 cm

State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

Presented for the first time at the Youth Union (1913-1914), the Perfected Portrait of Ivan Vassilievich Kliunkovis one of the most representative examples of Cubo-Futurism in Malevich’s work but also in the Russian painting of the period. With devastating humour perfectly in harmony with the spirit of the times, Malevich constructs a portrait of his friend and most faithful adherent, in deliberately neglecting all physical resemblance. The contour of the face remains visible but the anatomic details have been reduced to a minimum. In keeping with the alogism advocated by Malevich in 1913, identifiable elements (saw, portion of log architecture, smoke rising from a chimney) appear here and there without any logical link between them: projections of the interior world of the model.

With the portrait of Kliun, Malevich showed a profound interest in futurist research whose dynamic interpenetration of the human world and objects he retained. Nevertheless the chromatic scale and the reduction of forms come from the tradition of Russian popular art. 






Natalia Goncharova
The Cyclist 1913
Oil on canvas 79 x 105 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg© 2015, State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg/ © ADAGP, Paris 2015

The Cyclist is considered as a genuine archetype of Russian futurism in the way it reconciles realism with the perception of dynamism and movement. The figure of the velocipedist is perceived as if through a window on which appears a fragment of an inscription in Cyrillic alphabet. In the back, one can see buildings, including a large café recognizable by its sign on which appear the silhouettes of a beer mug and a bottle. Even incomplete, the words šlâ [pa](hat), šëlk(silk) and nit[ka](thread) are perfectly identifiable and remind us that Natalia Goncharova, along with several of her compatriots, explored the world of textiles, thus enhancing decorative arts. During her first retrospective in Moscow in 1913, her projects of textiles and embroidery were presented alongside her paintings. The static character of the silhouettes of arms, legs, back, wheels, the bike chain, accentuate the sensation of speed. The letter «Я» («I» in Russian) of the word “hat” stands out clearly. Isolated, it refers to the subject “I” and can appear as a discreet signature by the painter.




Mikhail Larionov
Portrait of Igor Stravinsky 1915
Oil on canvas 60 x 50 cm
Collection V. Tsarenkov Courtesy of Vladimir Tsarenkov private collection / © ADAGP, Paris 201538

 
Abstraction



Wassily Kandinsky
Overcast (1917) 
Oil on canvas, 105 x 134 cm (41.3 x 52.8 in) 
Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

The year 1917 was, according to Kandinsky, “dramatic.” Married in February, he thought of building himself a house and a big studio in Moscow but the October Revolution put an end to his project. Within the framework of the confiscations, he lost the building of 24apartments that he had owned. “We were largely compensated for the losses during the time of the Revolution,” wrote Nina Kandinsky. “... art and culture experienced a revolutionary spring that relegated to the shadows everything that had ever been done in Russia in that domain. All the artists saw themselves suddenly being offered quasi-unlimited possibilities.”

During those seven Russian years (1915-1921), Kandinsky held important posts. As director of the National Commission of Acquisitions, he contributed to the creation of twenty-two museums in the provinces. During that period, his artistic production was characterised by a strange heterogeneity. Some paintings abound with schematic figurative elements; others present an increasing geometrization indebted to Suprematism and Constructivism. The composition however always dominates over the construction and intuition over reason.


Alexander Rodchenko
Abstraction (Rupture) Circa 1920
 Oil on canvas140,2 x 136 cm
Greek State Museum of Contemporary Art –Costakis Collection, Thessaloniki© Greek State Museum of Contemporary Art –Costakis Collection, Thessaloniki / © ADAGP, Paris 201541

Between 1916 and 1920, Rodchenko explored all the possibilities that combinations of lines and colors offered him, seeking to create never-before-seen formal associations. Having launched himself into abstraction without ever having passed by the deconstruction of the object, his art by-passed the designs of Cubism, of Cubo-Futurism, of Suprematism, to delve into a knowledge of the world. Rodchenko’s problematic during his brief career was focused by turns on drawing, color and text. Here, one notices a very particular attentiveness to the texture of the pigment. With Abstraction Rupture, the artist does not speak about the world, but the painting speaks about itself.
 

 
Chagall and the Jewish Art Theatre

 




Marc Chagall
Introduction to the Jewish theatre 1920
Tempera on canvas toile, gouache 284 x 787 cm
Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow© Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow / © ADAGP, Paris 2015


Marc Chagall
The Dance 1920
Tempera on canvas, gouache 213,3 x 107,8 cm
Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow© Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow / © ADAGP, Paris 201539


Marc Chagall
The Music 1920
Tempera on canvas, gouache 212,3 x 103,2 cm
Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow© Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow/ © ADAGP, Paris 2015


The creation of the décor for the Jewish Art Theatre provided Marc Chagall with an intense joy. It was created in 1920 and shows a powerful and dream-like world. In a saraband full of verve and life, Chagall painted The Introduction to the Jewish Art Theatre, a very big panel of almost eight meters long that, like a huge comic strip ahead of its time, provides a space of liberty in astunning display of people and colours. A whirlwind of energy responding to the painter’s dreams. Subtle nuances fill these great works with familiar and comical details that Chagall often borrowed from daily life and from his imagination.

The whole of The Jewish Art Theatre constitutes one of the great events of the pictorial creation of the 20thcentury. The seven panels of which it’s made are now a part of the Tretyakov State Gallery collection in Moscow. Marc Chagall signed these works upon his return to the USSR in 1973, the first voyage he had made to his native land since his departure in 1922.


Suprematism



Kazimir Malevich
The Black Square Circa 1923
Oil on canvas 106 x 106 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg


Kazimir Malevich
The Black Cross Circa 1924
Oil on canvas 106 x106,5 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg




Kazimir Malevich
The Black Circle Circa 1925
Oil on canvas 105,5 x 106 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

The Black Square, the Black Circle, and The Black Cross make up a sort of triptych, including Kazimir Malevich’s epigraphic compositions, all painted, according to the specialists, around the end of the 1920s. However, the author dated them 1913, which would mean the works were made at the moment of the appearance of Suprematism and at the first showing of The Black Squareduring the famous “Last Futurist Exhibition 0.10” in 1915 at Petrograd.

It’s not simply by chance that Malevich presented the first variant of The Black Squareat the exhibition “0.10” like an icon, hanging it, according to Russian custom, in the “good angle” (the right angle of the room). The icon was the sign of a new epoch, it was thus that his contemporaries perceived The Black Square, probably in recalling Malevich’s words, “I have only one naked frameless icon, of my time (like a pocket)....”The Black Square became, during the artist’s lifetime, a certain symbol of Malevich’s art, the sign of the Suprematism that he had created.

School of Matiushin


Mikhail Matiushin
Movement in space 1921
Oil on canvas 124 x 168 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

Movement in space is among those works by Matiushin in which he expresses his theory of the interaction of colors and of the “enlarged vision” that he formulated definitively at the beginning of the 1920s. That became the working basis of the Zorved group that he created with Boris Ender in Leningrad. Intending to go beyond pictorial impressionism that portrayed only the phenomenological and fragmentary aspect of light, Matiushin multiplied experiments on color and visual perception that oneperceives under different conditions. Movement in space is the most brilliant example of the interaction that colors can have between themselves. According to Matiushin’s theories, color has nothing definite about it. It depends on neighbouring colors, on the forms that contain it, on the intensity of the lighting. His research led in 1932 to the publication of the Color Tables.



Boris Ender 
Extended space
Canvas on oil 69,1 x 97,8 cm
National Museum of Contemporary Art-Costakis Collection, Thessaloniki

During the 1920s, in opposition to the Futurist cult of the machine, Boris Ender and his sisters, Maria and Xenia Ender, actively participated in the development of the organicist theory defended by Matiushin and his wife Elena Guro whom the artist had met in 1911. In 1923 Ender became a member of Zorved (See-Know), a research laboratory where work was being doneon the widening of man’s ocular vision.

In his pictorial works, Boris Ender sought to show color in movement as well as its mutations according to the enlarging “point of view.”His work derives from non-figuration (the object is submerged in a colored magma) and from abstraction with its myriad of small touches of colors made into a complex mosaic. The very warm colors combining blues, yellows, reds and greens underline the artist’s very Slavic expressionist palette

The end of utopias



Kazimir Malevich
The Sportsmen 1930-1931
Oil on canvas 142 x 164 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

The painting The Sportsmen retains the geometric base in the construction of the figures, elaborated by Kazimir Malevich at the beginning of the years 1910 and enriched, in the new phase, by an increasing interest inthe pictorial style. The rhythm of the composition and the colors of this painting show the influence of icon painting and fresco. In particular it brings to memory the canonical images of the rows of the Apostles on the walls of ancient churches and the iconostases, but also the figures from the Futurist opera “Victory over the sun”(1913), in demonstrating the continuity of the creative evolution of the master, as attests the inscription on the back of the painting: “Suprematism in the shape of sportsmen.”



Pavel Filonov
The Formula of Spring 1927-1928
Oil on canvas 250 x 285 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

The Formula of Spring sums up all of Filonov’s creation, creation where the world is in perpetual metamorphosis. Made up of a intertwined network of colored units, in the way of tessera of mosaics, there is no empty space on the surface of the painting. It is the place of germination, of growth and of the opening outof the pictorial into the grandiose polyphony of atoms. The geometry is not that which consists, as in Cubism, of defining the object through several points of view, but that of the Universe that implies superior dimensions to those known by the Euclidian world.

Showing affinities with Matiushin’s “organicism”, Filonov’s analytical method assumes the auto-development of the form and its metamorphosis. Describing himself as “the artist of Universal Flowering”, Filonov believed in the purely scientific method of his work which made possible, according to him, “to include within the paintings life as biological process.


A bilingual scientific catalogue, richly  illustrated, including essays by specialists on avant - garde art as well as notices and  bibliographies on the artists and the different movements of that period will be published  for the event.