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There is little information about his life. It is not known where he was born. Andrei Rublev probably lived in the Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra near Moscow under Nikon of Radonezh, who became hegumen after the death of Sergii Radonezhsky (1392).
The first mention of Rublev is in 1405 when he decorated icons and frescos for the Cathedral of the Annunciation of the Moscow Kremlin in company with Theophanes the Greek and Prokhor of Gorodets. His name was the last of the list of masters as the junior both by rank and by age. Theophanes was an important Byzantine master who moved to Russia, and is considered to have trained Rublev.
Andrey Rublev………………………………………………………………………………….…….…………….3
Biography…………………………………………………………………………………………….……………..….…….3
Wasily Kandinsky…………………………………………………………………………..……………….…….4
Artistic periods……………………………………………………………………………….…….…………….….…….5
Artistic metamorphosis (1896–1911)………………………………………….…………………….……...….6
The Blue Rider (1911–1914)……………………………………………………….………………..………..…....7
Return to Russia (1914–1921)……………………………………………………………………….……..….…..8
The Bauhaus (1922–1933)…………………………………………………………………………..……….….……8
The great synthesis (1934–1944)………………………………………………………….……………..…..……9
Kazimir Malevich…………………………………………….…………………………………………..…..……10
Life and work…………………………………………………………………………………….……………….….………10
Date of birth……………………………………………………………………………………….…………….……….….13
Posthumous sales………………………………………………………………………………….……………….…….13
References…………………………………………………………………………………………………………….14
In
Kandinsky’s work, some characteristics are obvious while certain touches
are more discrete and veiled; that is to say they reveal themselves
only progressively to those who make the effort to deepen their connection
with his work. He intended his forms, which he subtly harmonized and
placed, to resonate with the observer's own soul.
Kazimir Malevich
Kazimir
Severinovich Malevich, (February 23, 1879, previously 1878: see below
– May 15, 1935) was a Russian painter and art theoretician, born
in Ukraine of ethnic Polish parents. He was a pioneer of geometric abstract
art and the originator of the Avant-garde Suprematist movement.
Life and work
Kazimir Malevich was born near Kyiv in the Kyiv Governorate of the Russian Empire. His parents, Seweryn and Ludwika Malewicz, were ethnic Poles, and he was baptised in the Roman Catholic Church. His father was the manager of a sugar factory. Kazimir was the first of fourteen children, although only nine of the children survived into adulthood. His family moved often and he spent most childhood in the villages of Ukraine amidst sugar-beet plantations, far from centers of culture. Until age 12 he knew nothing of professional artists, though art had surrounded him in childhood. He delighted in peasant embroidery, and in decorated walls and stoves. He himself was able to paint in the peasant style. He studied drawing in Kyiv from 1895 to 1896.
From 1896 to 1904 Kazimir Malevich lived in Kursk. In 1904, after the death of his father, he moved to Moscow. He studied at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture from 1904 to 1910 and in the studio of Fedor Rerberg in Moscow (1904–1910). In 1911 he participated in the second exhibition of the group Soyuz Molodyozhi (Union of Youth) in St. Petersburg, together with Vladimir Tatlin and, in 1912, the group held its third exhibition, which included works by Aleksandra Ekster, Tatlin and others. In the same year he participated in an exhibition by the collective Donkey's Tail in Moscow. By that time his works were influenced by Natalia Goncharova and Mikhail Larionov, Russian avant-garde painters who were particularly interested in Russian folk art called lubok. In March 1913 a major exhibition of Aristarkh Lentulov's paintings opened in Moscow. The effect of this exhibition was comparable with that of Paul Cézanne in Paris in 1907, as all the main Russian avant-garde artists of the time (including Malevich) immediately absorbed the cubist principles and began using them in their works. Already in the same year the Cubo-Futurist opera Victory Over the Sun with Malevich's stage-set became a great success. In 1914 Malevich exhibited his works in the Salon des Independants in Paris together with Alexander Archipenko, Sonia Delaunay, Aleksandra Ekster and Vadim Meller, among others.
Black Square, 1913
In 1915, Malevich laid down the foundations of Suprematism. He published his manifesto From Cubism to Suprematism. In 1915-1916 he worked with other Suprematist artists in a peasant/artisan co-operative in Skoptsi and Verbovka village. In 1916-1917 he participated in exhibitions of the Jack of Diamonds group in Moscow together with Nathan Altman, David Burliuk and A. Ekster, among others. Famous examples of his Suprematist works include Black Square (1913) and White on White (1918).
In 1918, Malevich decorated a play, Mystery Bouffe, by Vladimir Mayakovskiy produced by Vsevolod Meyerhold.
He was also interested in aerial photography and aviation, which led him to abstractions inspired by or derived from aerial landscapes. As Professor Julia Bekman Chadaga (now of Macalaster College) has written: “In his later writings, Malevich defined the 'additional element' as the quality of any new visual environment bringing about a change in perception .... In a series of diagrams illustrating the ‘environments' that influence various painterly styles, the Suprematist is associated with a series of aerial views rendering the familiar landscape into an abstraction..." (excerpted from Ms. Bekman Chadaga's paper delivered at Columbia University's 2000 symposium, "Art, Technology, and Modernity in Russia and Eastern Europe").
After the October Revolution, Malevich became a member of the Collegium on the Arts of Narkompros, the commission for the protection of monuments and the museums commission (all from 1918–1919). He taught at the Vitebsk Practical Art School in the USSR (now part of Belarus) (1919–1922), the Leningrad Academy of Arts (1922–1927), the Kyiv State Art Institute (1927–1929), and the House of the Arts in Leningrad (1930). He wrote the book The World as Non-Objectivity (Munich 1926; English trans. 1959) which outlines his Suprematist theories.
In 1927, he traveled to Warsaw and then to Berlin and Munich for a retrospective which finally brought him international recognition. He arranged to leave most of the paintings behind when he returned to the Soviet Union. Malevich's assumption that a shifting in the attitudes of the Soviet authorities towards the modernist art movement would take place after the death of Lenin and Trotsky's fall from power, were proven correct in a couple of years, when the Stalinist regime turned against formes of abstractism, considering them a type of "bourgeois" art, that could not express social realities. As a consequence, many of his works were confiscated and he was banned from creating and exhibiting similar art.
Critics derided Malevich for reaching art by negating everything good and pure: love of life and love of nature. The Westernizer artist and art historian Alexandre Benois was one such critic. Malevich responded that art can advance and develop for art's sake alone, regardless of its pleasure: art does not need us, and it never did.
Malevich's work only recently reappeared in art exhibitions in Russia after a long absence. Since then art followers have labored to reintroduce the artist to Russian lovers of painting. A book of his theoretical works with an anthology of reminiscences and writings has been published.
Malevich
died of cancer in Leningrad on May 15, 1935. On his deathbed he was
exhibited with the black square above him. His ashes were sent to Nemchinovka,
and buried in a field near his dacha. A white cube decorated with a
black square was placed on his tomb. The city of Leningrad bestowed
a pension on Malevich's mother and daughter. "No phenomenon is
mortal," Malevich wrote in an unpublished manuscript, "and
this means not only the body but the idea as well, a symbol that one
is eternally reincarnated in another form which actually exists in the
conscious and unconscious person."
Date of birth
Recently
Ukrainian art historians established the precise birthdate of the artist:
February 23, 1879. Malevich and Ukraine, by professor D. Gorbachev,
2006, Kiev, reveals many new biographical details. French art historian
Andrei Nakov re-established Malevich's birth year as 1879 (and not 1878),
and argues for restoration of the Polish spelling of his name.
Posthumous sales
Black
Square, the fourth version of his magnum opus painted in the 1920s was
discovered in 1993 in Samara and purchased by Inkombank for $250,000.
In April 2002 the painting was auctioned for an equivalent of one million
dollars. The purchase was financed by the Russian philanthropist Vladimir
Potanin, who donated funds to Russian Ministry of Culture and ultimately
to State Hermitage Museum collection. According to the Hermitage website,
this was the largest private contribution to state art museums since
the October Revolution.
On
November 3, 2008 a work by Malevich entitled Suprematist Composition
from 1916 set the world record for any Russian work of art and any work
sold at auction for that year, selling at Sotheby’s in New York City
for just over $60 million U.S. (far surpassing his previous record of
$17 million set in 2000).
References
1. http://slovari.yandex.ru/~
2. http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/
3. http://rublev.voskres.ru/
4. http://smallbay.ru/kandinsky.
5. http://philologos.narod.ru/
6. http://www.kazmalevich.info/
Информация о работе Андрей Рублев, Василий Кандинский, Казимир Малевич