First Russian Art Exhibition

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The First Russian Art Exhibition [Erste russische Kunstausstellung] opened at the Van Diemen Gallery on Unter den Linden 21, near the Russian embassy in Berlin, on 15 October 1922. More than 700 works by 167 artists where shown, including paintings, graphic works, sculptures, as well as designs for theater, architectural models, and porcelain. The exhibition's official host was the Russian Ministry for Information, and it was put together by the artists Naum Gabo, David Shterenberg, and Nathan Altman. El Lissitzky designed the catalogue's cover. Gabo was in charge of the three rooms where Russian avant-garde art was presented, including several of his own sculptures. Due to the positive response in the press and the large number of visitors (ca. 15,000), the exhibition was prolonged until the end of the year. On the initiative of the International Workers' Assistance, the show was conceived as a commercial exhibition; the proceeds were to go to "Russia's starving". In the Spring of 1923, a version of the exhibition traveled to Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.

After the exhibition, the director of the Modern Department Friedrich A. Lutz, continued to show new art until 1926. The parent company and its subsidiaries were seized by the Nazis in 1935. [1]

Catalogue

Literature

  • R. Šternberg, "Prva ruska umetnička izložba v Berlinu 1922", Zenit 17-18, Zagreb, Sep-Oct 1922, p 56. (Serbo-Croatian)
  • [Branko] Ve Poljanski, "Kroz rusku izložbu u Berlinu", Zenit 22, Zagreb, Mar 1923, pp [4-5]. (Serbo-Croatian)
  • Eckhard Neumann, "Russia's 'Leftist Art' in Berlin, 1922", Art Journal 27:1 (Autumn 1967), pp 20-23. [2]
  • The 1st Russian Show: A Commemeration of the Van Diemen Exhibition, ed. Andrei Nakov, London: Annely Juda Fine Art, 1983, 175 pp. (English)
  • Erste Russische Kunstausstellung: Berlin 1922. Galerie van Diemen & Co., Berlin 1922, ed. Eberhard Roters, Cologne: Nachdruck König, 1988. (German)
  • Roland Enke, "Malevich and Berlin", c2003.

See also

Links