6 results on '"non-conformist art"'
Search Results
2. The Metaphysics of Presence and the Invisible Traces: Eduard Steinberg's Polemical Dialogues.
- Author
-
Sakhno, Irina
- Subjects
EUROPEAN art ,METAPHYSICS ,ABSTRACT art ,GEOMETRIC shapes ,STILL life painting ,PEASANTS ,AVANT-garde (Arts) - Abstract
The article examines the paintings by Eduard Steinberg, a Soviet non-conformist painter from the 1950s to the 1980s from the standpoint of the plastics of his language. The author focuses on Steinberg's polemical dialogues with the greatest names in Russian and European avant-garde art, including both common points and disagreements. By analyzing the painter's texts through the prism of poetics of the invisible and the ontology of traces, the author observes Steinberg's early art of the 1960s and 1970s as an attempt to create a symbolic language and attach an ideographic status to art. Through simultaneous use of two artistic strategies—mystical and religious symbolism, coupled with metageometry Steinberg arrives at optical formalism and spectator dialectics, vying to see the invisible and record the polysemantic nature of the symbolic sign. The article analyzes the influence Vladimir Veisberg and his "invisible painting" had on Steinberg, including the "white on white" style, as well as Giorgio Morandi's still-life vision of metaphysical painting. The author believes that by relying on analogies and reminiscences, Steinberg refers his audience to his predecessors and joins them in an intertextual dialogue. A special place here belongs to Kazimir Malevich with his radicalism, his trend towards metasymbolism and the language of the basic forms—the circle, square and cross. All of these are close to Steinberg's geometric plastics of the 1970s and 1980s. Staying true to the pure forms of Suprematism, Steinberg builds up an aesthetics of the geometric forms of his own, where abstract art comes together with the ontological progress towards God. The Countryside series (1985–1987) shows influence of Кazimir Malevich's Peasant Cycle, some principles of icon painting and Neo-Primitivist art. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Female Collectors for Exhibition History of Non-Conformist Art in France: Marie-Thérèse Cochin Gallery Case.
- Author
-
Vinogradova, Ekaterina
- Subjects
HISTORY in art ,ART history ,WOMEN'S roles ,EXHIBITIONS ,ART exhibitions ,FEMALES - Abstract
The role of female collectors in the promotion of non-official Soviet art is rarely reflected in texts on the history of art. In the shadow of the well-known figures, their patronage stays obscure. This article proposes to reflect on the exhibition practice of the Marie-Thérèse first Gallery in order to add to art history by rethinking the context with a gendered lens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Metaphysics of Presence and the Invisible Traces: Eduard Steinberg’s Polemical Dialogues
- Author
-
Irina Sakhno
- Subjects
Steinberg ,non-conformist art ,metaphysics of the presence ,ontology of traces ,apophatic vision ,symbolism ,Arts in general ,NX1-820 - Abstract
The article examines the paintings by Eduard Steinberg, a Soviet non-conformist painter from the 1950s to the 1980s from the standpoint of the plastics of his language. The author focuses on Steinberg’s polemical dialogues with the greatest names in Russian and European avant-garde art, including both common points and disagreements. By analyzing the painter’s texts through the prism of poetics of the invisible and the ontology of traces, the author observes Steinberg’s early art of the 1960s and 1970s as an attempt to create a symbolic language and attach an ideographic status to art. Through simultaneous use of two artistic strategies—mystical and religious symbolism, coupled with metageometry Steinberg arrives at optical formalism and spectator dialectics, vying to see the invisible and record the polysemantic nature of the symbolic sign. The article analyzes the influence Vladimir Veisberg and his “invisible painting” had on Steinberg, including the “white on white” style, as well as Giorgio Morandi’s still-life vision of metaphysical painting. The author believes that by relying on analogies and reminiscences, Steinberg refers his audience to his predecessors and joins them in an intertextual dialogue. A special place here belongs to Kazimir Malevich with his radicalism, his trend towards metasymbolism and the language of the basic forms—the circle, square and cross. All of these are close to Steinberg’s geometric plastics of the 1970s and 1980s. Staying true to the pure forms of Suprematism, Steinberg builds up an aesthetics of the geometric forms of his own, where abstract art comes together with the ontological progress towards God. The Countryside series (1985–1987) shows influence of Кazimir Malevich’s Peasant Cycle, some principles of icon painting and Neo-Primitivist art.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Female Collectors for Exhibition History of Non-Conformist Art in France: Marie-Thérèse Cochin Gallery Case
- Author
-
Ekaterina Vinogradova
- Subjects
non-conformist art ,art exhibition ,France–USSR ,women/female patrons ,victimization in art ,Arts in general ,NX1-820 - Abstract
The role of female collectors in the promotion of non-official Soviet art is rarely reflected in texts on the history of art. In the shadow of the well-known figures, their patronage stays obscure. This article proposes to reflect on the exhibition practice of the Marie-Thérèse first Gallery in order to add to art history by rethinking the context with a gendered lens.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Slavic and Eastern-European Visuality. Modernity and Tradition.
- Author
-
Ioffe, Dennis and Ioffe, Dennis
- Subjects
Biotechnology ,Technology: general issues ,"First Universal Exhibition of Models of Interplanetary Apparatuses and Mechanisms Gadgets and Historical Materials" (Moscow 1927) ,"nvisible painting" ,1905 Revolution ,Aleksandr Golovin ,Aleksei Kruchenykh ,Alexander Melamid ,Andrei Bely ,Anthroposophy ,Batiushkov ,Bierce ,Deleuze G. ,El Lissitzky ,Fridrikh Tsander ,Georgii Krutikov ,Hedwig Fechheimer ,Hesychasm ,Hortus mirabilis ,Igor' Sikorsky ,Joseph Kosuth ,Konstantin Tsiolkovsky ,Krystyna Miłobędzka ,Letatlin ,Magritte R. ,Malevich ,Mikhail Larionov ,Modernism ,Moscow conceptualism ,N. Fyodorov ,Nabokov ,Nadezhda Stolpovskaya ,Natalia Goncharova ,Neo-Primitivism ,Nest ,Nikolai II ,Nikolai Punin ,October ,Petr Miturich ,Polish contemporary poetry ,Russian ,Russian Academy of Arts ,Russian Avant-garde ,Russian Golden Age poets ,Russian Neo-avant-garde ,Russian art ,Russian avant-garde ,Russian modernism ,Russian painters in Rome ,Samuil Alyanski ,Sen-Senkov A. ,Sergei Eisenstein ,Sergei Sigei ,Slavic and Russian modernism ,Soviet ,Steinberg ,Suprematism ,Symbolism ,Ukraine ,V. Chekrygin ,Vadim Zakharov ,Valentin Serov ,Veisberg ,Velemir Khlebnikov ,Vera Khlebnikova ,Victor Skersis ,Vitaly Komar ,Vlad Mamyshev-Monroe ,Vladimir Tatlin ,World of Art ,Yuri Albert ,advertising ,aeronautics ,ancient Egypt ,anthropology ,apophatic vision ,archaic stereotypes ,art criticism ,art education ,art historical hermeneutics ,avant-garde ,avant-garde poem ,byt ,calligram ,camp ,classical ,compelling visualities ,cosmism ,cultural heritage ,curatorial practice ,dazzle ,dematerialization ,design ,determinism ,drag ,early art brut painting ,embodied sexualities ,film ,global poetics ,historicity ,icon painting ,icons ,impersonation ,kilim ,letun ,life-creation ,material object ,metageometry ,metaphor ,metaphysics of the presence ,mirror ,missile ,mourning ,narcissism ,narrative ,new man ,non-conformist art ,ontology of traces ,painting ,photo art ,photocarpet ,picture of garden ,poetic garden ,poetics ,poetry ,power ,prognostic function ,realism ,rhizome ,rose ,satirical journals ,self-fashioning ,self-portrait ,selfie ,semiotics ,sex ,sphinx ,symbolism ,the journal Notes of Dreamers ,the publishing house Alkonost ,totalitarian terror ,transfurism ,trickster ,violence ,visual ,visual art ,visual image ,visual poem ,visual poetry ,volnovik - Abstract
Summary: Special Issue of Arts: "Slavic and Eastern-European Visuality: Modernity and Tradition" is focused on researching interactions of art and literature, of philosophy and visual poetry, and generally on theoretical aspects of cultural analysis.
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.