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  • |death_place = Leningrad, Soviet Union ...Isaevich Altman''' (Натан Исаевич Альтман; 1889–1970) was a Ukrainian and Soviet avant-garde artist, Cubist painter, stage designer and book illustrator.
    900 bytes (91 words) - 22:50, 25 May 2022
  • ...s of German avant-garde art in the early twentieth century (Expressionism, Futurism, Dadaism, Magic Realism).
    921 bytes (125 words) - 22:07, 25 May 2022
  • ...a new direction within the avant-garde that sought to find a place between Futurism, Surrealism and Dada. * ''Futurism / Formalism / FEKS: Eccentrism and Soviet Cinema, 1918-36'', eds. Ian Christie and John Gillett, London: British Film
    5 KB (461 words) - 22:25, 25 May 2022
  • ...orking class and artists by establishing of a new world order based on the Soviet communist model. This brought him into conflict with the politically strong [[Category:Futurism|Testa di ferro, La]]
    1 KB (219 words) - 11:50, 6 September 2015
  • |death_place = Moscow, Soviet Union ...ction Apparatus: Anti-Universalist Concepts of Intelligentsia in the early Soviet Union"], trans. Aileen Derieg, ''transversal'' 9 (2010). {{en}}
    4 KB (432 words) - 08:44, 11 July 2023
  • ...' (1900-1967) was a poet, translator, critic, and co-founder of the Polish Futurism movement. ...his Communist sympathies and Wat was considered not reliable enough by the Soviet-sponsored Communist authorities of Poland to allow him to publish his own w
    5 KB (692 words) - 12:39, 3 December 2022
  • ...и, Assotsiatsia Khudozhnikov Revolutsii or AKhR, 1928-1932) was a group of Soviet artists. Diverse members of the group gained favor as the legitimate bearer [[Narkompros]] and [[INKhUK]] were attacked for their Futurism and Katsman accused those artists (who had appropriated the epithet 'left'
    6 KB (857 words) - 21:59, 25 May 2022
  • ...n "Silver Age", perhaps the most radical poet of [[Futurism#Russia|Russian Futurism]], a movement that included [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]], [[David Burliuk]] and ...[[LEF]] in Moscow in 1923. After the Communist Party denounced Futurism in Soviet literature, Kruchenykh ceased writing zaum’ and became an archivist. He d
    12 KB (1,400 words) - 09:12, 1 November 2024
  • ...erally incoherent and aggressive manifesto borrowed from [[Marinetti]]'s [[Futurism#Marinetti1909|Futurist manifestos]] and Spanish [[Ultraism|Ultraist]] ideas
    8 KB (1,074 words) - 23:42, 27 January 2023
  • ...dia:Jangfeldt_Bengt_Majakovskij_and_Futurism_1917-1921.pdf|Majakovskij and Futurism, 1917-1921]]'', Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1976. Review: [http://www.js
    13 KB (579 words) - 16:22, 2 July 2019
  • * ''Futurism / Formalism / FEKS: Eccentrism and Soviet Cinema, 1918-36'', eds. Ian Christie and John Gillett, London: British Film
    6 KB (707 words) - 09:30, 1 November 2024
  • |death_place = [[Moscow]], Soviet Union ...irovich Mayakovsky''' [Владимир Владимирович Маяковский] was a Russian and Soviet poet, playwright, artist and stage and film actor.
    18 KB (2,272 words) - 20:14, 4 August 2025
  • |death_place = Santalovo, Kresttsy county, Novgorod Governorate, Soviet Union ...began publishing poetry in 1908; by 1912 he was a leading member of the [[Futurism#Russia|Russian Futurists]]. The “verbal mastery” of his zaum’ poetry
    18 KB (2,204 words) - 10:30, 1 November 2024
  • |death_place = Moscow, Soviet Union ...o France and Italy again, accompanied by Mukhina, and discovers cubism and futurism, which she synthetises into suprematist-inspired though still kind of repre
    13 KB (1,532 words) - 00:04, 28 January 2023
  • ...' Relocated"], in ''Inside the Film Factory: New Approaches to Russian and Soviet Cinema'', eds. Richard Taylor and Ian Christie, Routledge, 1991, 81-102, n2 ...urist Influences from Russia and the West", in ''International Yearbook of Futurism Studies. Vol. 5'', ed. Günter Berghaus, Berlin: De Gruyter, 2015, pp 252-2
    7 KB (914 words) - 08:17, 23 February 2025
  • ...sariat of Enlightenment (Narkompros)]], a cultural organization founded in Soviet Russia in November 1917 shortly after the October Revolution, replacing the ...dia:Jangfeldt_Bengt_Majakovskij_and_Futurism_1917-1921.pdf|Majakovskij and Futurism, 1917-1921]]'', Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1976, pp 30-50. {{en}}
    15 KB (1,657 words) - 22:27, 25 May 2022
  • ...естьянского Правительства, 1920, 19 декабря, № 98, ст. 522, с. 540 - Great Soviet Encyclopedia, [http://www.cultinfo.ru/fulltext/1/001/008/007/304.htm ''Вх ...ibition stands and kiosks.<ref name = "Tupitsyn">Margarita Tupitsyn, ''The Soviet Photograph, 1924–1937,'' Yale University Press, 1996, ISBN 0300064500</re
    33 KB (4,291 words) - 22:59, 25 May 2022
  • ...- the first time that the term was used; in it they criticised Cubism and Futurism as not becoming fully abstract arts, stated that the spiritual experience w ...xhibition on Tverskoie Boulevard. Points out the limitations of cubism and futurism, outlining the principles for a new sculptural technique; in the 1923 versi
    17 KB (2,297 words) - 09:48, 11 December 2023
  • ...nti-Western ''Russian'' character of Lenin and Trotsky rather than their ''Soviet'' politics), mystical new-age thought, internationalism, and anarchism. ''Z ...d artists, Zenitism practiced the ambivalent interpretation of [[dada]], [[futurism]] and accepted the new wave of [[cubism]]. In its mature phase, ''Zenit'' i
    28 KB (3,829 words) - 08:30, 16 June 2024
  • |death_place = Barwicha near Moscow, Soviet Union ...ied), where he taught until the outbreak of WWII, when he emigrated to the Soviet Union (where his political sympathies lay). Here he devoted himself to scie
    18 KB (2,401 words) - 23:30, 27 January 2023

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