Difference between revisions of "UNOVIS"

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==Literature==
 
==Literature==
* Aleksandra Shatskikh (Александра Шатских), ''Vitebsk. Zhizn iskusstva 1917-1922'' [Витебск. Жизнь искусства 1917-1922], Moscow: Yazyki russkoy kultury, 2001, 256 pp. [http://chagal-vitebsk.com/node/40 Interview], [http://narodknigi.ru/journals/40/aleksandra_shatskikh_vitebsk_zhizn_iskusstva_1917_1922/ Review]. {{ru}}
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* Aleksandra Shatskikh (Александра Шатских), ''Vitebsk. Zhizn' iskusstva 1917-1922'' [Витебск. Жизнь искусства 1917-1922], Moscow: Yazyki russkoy kultury, 2001, 256 pp. [http://chagal-vitebsk.com/node/40 Interview]. Review: [http://narodknigi.ru/journals/40/aleksandra_shatskikh_vitebsk_zhizn_iskusstva_1917_1922/ Zeltser] (NK 2002). {{ru}}
** ''Vitebsk: The Life of Art'', New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007, 408 pp. [http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300101089], [http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz276725891inh.pdf TOC]. {{en}}
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** ''Vitebsk: The Life of Art'', trans. Katherine Foshko Tsan, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007, xiv+391 pp. [http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300101089], [http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz276725891inh.pdf TOC]. Reviews: [http://sci-hub.org/10.1111/j.1467-8357.2009.01060_4.x Railing] (AB 2009), [http://crosspollenblog.wordpress.com/2013/11/17/review-aleksandra-shatskikh-vitebsk-the-life-of-art/ Miller] (2013), [http://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/book/vitebsk Soifer] (JBC). {{en}}
 
* Pamela Kachurin, "The Center of Artistic Life: The People's School of Art in Vitebsk, 1919-1923", ch. 2 in Kachurin, ''Making Modernism Soviet: The Russian Avant-Garde in the Early Soviet Era, 1918-1928'', Northwestern University Press, 2013, pp 37-70. {{en}}
 
* Pamela Kachurin, "The Center of Artistic Life: The People's School of Art in Vitebsk, 1919-1923", ch. 2 in Kachurin, ''Making Modernism Soviet: The Russian Avant-Garde in the Early Soviet Era, 1918-1928'', Northwestern University Press, 2013, pp 37-70. {{en}}
 
* Tatyana Goryacheva (Татьяна Горячева), [http://www.raruss.ru/avant-garde/2470-almanac-unovis-1.html "Almanakh UNOVIS No 1. Vitebsk, 1920"] [Альманах УНОВИС № 1. Витебск, 1920], n.d. {{ru}}
 
* Tatyana Goryacheva (Татьяна Горячева), [http://www.raruss.ru/avant-garde/2470-almanac-unovis-1.html "Almanakh UNOVIS No 1. Vitebsk, 1920"] [Альманах УНОВИС № 1. Витебск, 1920], n.d. {{ru}}

Revision as of 11:55, 15 August 2015

A group photo of the students and professors of the UNOVIS group, departing from Vitebsk for the 1st All-Russian Conference of Art Teachers and Students in Moscow. Malevich in the centre, 1920.
UNOVIS group, Vitebsk, June 1922. Left-to-right, standing: I.Chervinko, K.Malevich, T.Royak, A.Kagan, N.Suetin, L.Yudin, E.Magaril; seated: M.Vexler, V.Ermolaeva, I.Chashnik, L.Khidekel.
Kazimir Malevich teaching students of UNOVIS, Vitebsk, 1925.

UNOVIS (Utverditeli Novogo Iskusstva [Advocates of New Art]; also POSNOVIS, Posledovateli Novogo Iskusstva [Followers of the New Art]; and MOLPOSNOVIS [Young Followers of New Art]).

1919 the MOLPOSNOVIS group was formed by students at the Vitebsk Art School, later joined by some of the school's professors and quickly evolved into POSNOVIS. The group was very active, working on numerous projects and experiments, in most if not all media available at the time. January 1920 Malevich was invited to teach at the school by Chagall and immediately appointed by the director of the school at the time, Vera Yermolayeva, to head a teaching studio. February 1920, under his leadership, the group worked on a Suprematist ballet, choreographed by Nina Kogan, and the precursor to Aleksander Kruchenykh's influential futurist opera, Victory Over the Sun. Following the production, POSNOVIS underwent more changes and was renamed UNOVIS on 14 February 1920.

Early 1920 Chagall selected Malevich to succeed him as director; Malevich accepted and radically reorganized not only UNOVIS but the entire school's curriculum; transformed UNOVIS into a highly structured organization, forming the UNOVIS Council. Meanwhile the group's theories and styles were rapidly evolving at the hands of Malevich and his star students and colleagues, including notable Russian artists El Lissitzky, Nikolai Suetin, Ilia Chashnik, Vera Ermolaeva, Anna Kagan, and Lev Yudin, amongst others. The group's objective was now to introduce Suprematist designs and ideals to Russian society, working with and for the Soviet government: "organization of design work for new types of useful structures and requirements, and implementation; the formulation of tasks of new architecture; elaboration of new ornamentation (textiles, printed textiles, castings and other products); designs of monumental decorations for use in the embellishment of towns on national holidays; designs for internal and external decoration and painting of accommodation, and implementation; creation of furniture and all objects of practical use; creation of a contemporary type of book and other achievements in the field of printing."

The group took this plan to the streets, furnishing much of Vitebsk in Suprematist art and propaganda. Still, Malevich had more ambitious plans and urged his students to do bigger, more permanent works -- namely architecture. Lissitzky, who was director of the architectural faculty, worked with his student Chashnik, drafting unorthodox plans for free-floating buildings and enormous steel and glass structures along with more practical designs for housing complexes and even a speaker's podium for the town square. Chashnik would go on to succeed Lissitzky as head of the architectural facility along with her fellow student, Lazar Khidekel.

Embracing the Communist ideal, the group chose to share credit and responsibility for all works produced. They signed all works with a solitary black square, a homage to a previous artwork by Malevich. This would become the de facto seal of UNOVIS and took the place of individual names or initials.

In June 1920 UNOVIS's ambitions accelerated, culminating in a print collection of UNOVIS philosophies and theories and participation in the 'First All-Russian Conference of Teachers and Students of Arts', which took place in Moscow. UNOVIS students who made the trip from Vitebsk to Moscow rapidly distributed artworks, newsletters, manifestos, fliers, and copies of Malevich's On New Systems in Art and copies of the UNOVIS Almanac. UNOVIS succeeded in achieving recognition and became respected as an established and influential movement.

In August 1920, UNOVIS included about 40 people: Avidon, I. Baytin, F. Belostotskaya, O. Bernstein, M. Wexler, E. Volkhonsky, I. Gavris, Grigorovich, A. Girutskaya, B. Ermolaeva, L. Zevin, I. Zeldin, AL Zuperman, N. Ivanova, N. Kogan, Korsakov, L. Klyatskin, Kudryashov, M. Kunin, L. Lissitzky, E. Magara K. Malevich , P. Miturich, B. Noskov, GA Noskov, MM Noskov, E. Royak, Rubin, D. Sannikov, Sifman, B. Strzheminsky, N. Suetin Fradkin, L. Khidekel, L. Tsiperson, A. Zeitlin, and . Chashniky, I. Chervinko, L. Yudin.

In April 1922, Malevich with his group (Suyetin, Chashnikov, Ermolaeva, Hidekilem) moved to Petrograd, where they continue to develop ideas of UNOVIS.

In total, UNOVIS as the union was involved in 8 exhibitions: 3 in Vitebsk, 3 in Moscow, First Russian Art Exhibition in Berlin (1922), and 'The Exhibition of all areas over five years' St. Petersburg (1923).

While their influence on art lasted for generations, their popularity immediately following the conference was short-lived. By 1922, the core group splintered and two contrasting, adverse factions formed. Malevich and his followers championed practical, productive methods of changing society while the rest favored a more philosophical Suprematism, working on furthering Suprematist theory and ideology. By this time most of the native artists associated with UNOVIS had moved on to other schools, cities, and movements. Even after the group's dissolution, publications bearing the UNOVIS black square appeared for years.

Works

Literature

  • Aleksandra Shatskikh (Александра Шатских), Vitebsk. Zhizn' iskusstva 1917-1922 [Витебск. Жизнь искусства 1917-1922], Moscow: Yazyki russkoy kultury, 2001, 256 pp. Interview. Review: Zeltser (NK 2002). (Russian)
    • Vitebsk: The Life of Art, trans. Katherine Foshko Tsan, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007, xiv+391 pp. [1], TOC. Reviews: Railing (AB 2009), Miller (2013), Soifer (JBC). (English)
  • Pamela Kachurin, "The Center of Artistic Life: The People's School of Art in Vitebsk, 1919-1923", ch. 2 in Kachurin, Making Modernism Soviet: The Russian Avant-Garde in the Early Soviet Era, 1918-1928, Northwestern University Press, 2013, pp 37-70. (English)
  • Tatyana Goryacheva (Татьяна Горячева), "Almanakh UNOVIS No 1. Vitebsk, 1920" [Альманах УНОВИС № 1. Витебск, 1920], n.d. (Russian)

See also