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Министерство образования и науки Российской Федерации
ФЕДЕРАЛЬНОЕ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОЕ БЮДЖЕТНОЕ ОБРАЗОВАТЕЛЬНОЕ УЧРЕЖДЕНИЕ ВЫСШЕГО ОБРАЗОВАНИЯ
«Санкт-Петербургский государственный университет
промышленных технологий и дизайна»
Кафедра иностранных языков
ИЗ ИСТОРИИ ИСКУССТВА XX ВЕКА
Методические указания
для студентов по направлению подготовки:
50.03.04 - Теория и история искусств
Составитель
А. И. Кузьмичев
Санкт-Петербург
2017
Утверждено
на заседании кафедры
06.03.2017., протокол № 6
Рецензент О.В. Шведова
Методические указания содержат оригинальные текстовые
материалы на английском языке и художественные иллюстрации с
комментариями, и сопровождаются лексическими упражнениями и
заданиями смыслового и искусствоведческого характера.
Цель методических указаний - расширение профессионального
лексического запаса английского языка и совершенствование навыков
перевода с английского языка на русский на примере подобранных
текстов, знакомящих с важнейшими направлениями изобразительного
искусства ХХ века.
Работа с текстами и заданиями пособия требует от студентов
творческого отношения.
Методические указания включают задания для развития понимания
иностранного текста и ознакомления с познавательным материалом в
увлекательной форме.
Методические указания разработаны для студентов очной и заочной
формы обучения по направлению подготовки 50.03.04 «Теория и история
искусств». Методические указания можно также использовать в качестве
домашнего чтения для всех студентов по направлению подготовки
50.03.04 «Теория и история искусств».
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INTRODUCTION
The twentieth century was one of particular worldwide upheaval, ranging
from wars to economic downturns to radical political movements. No one can
disagree that the years between 1900 and 2000 were years of extreme change for
artists all over the world. These changes were boldly reflected in the works of
avante-garde artists throughout the century. Classical art was being challenged
more and more as waves of nationalism and imperialism spread over the world
in the early half of the twentieth century.
Artists explored extreme and varying themes in the years before and after
World War I, and those same themes were revisited in the aftermath of World
War II, creating an interesting parallel.
The twentieth century has seen huge changes in the modes and meanings
of artistic production that mirror the enormous social changes that have occurred
during the same time period. Continuing with the break with the academic
values such as the hierarchy of genres, many movements and many countries reevaluated aesthetics, technique, color, media, meaning, and many other aspects
of artistic enterprise. Technology has had not only an indirect impact on artists,
but often is the subject matter, or even the media that artists have worked with.
Arguably the most eventful period in the history of art, the 20th century
witnessed the birth (foreshadowed at the end of the 19th century) and outgrowth
of abstraction, along with innumerable movements that came and went amidst
radical changes across the globe.
Here we try to focus on the most prominent and well-known movements
and artists of the XX century art history.
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Unit 1
Expressionism
“True dreams and
visions should be as
visible to the artist
as the phenomena of
the objective."
Oskar Kokoschka
Key Ideas.
Expressionism
emerged
simultaneously
in
various cities across
Germany as a response
to
a
widespread
anxiety
about
humanity's
increasingly discordant
relationship with the
world and accompanying lost feelings of authenticity and spirituality. In part a
reaction against Impressionism and academic art, Expressionism was inspired
most heavily by the Symbolist currents in late nineteenth-century art. Vincent
van Gogh, Edvard Munch, and James Ensor proved particularly influential to the
Expressionists, encouraging the distortion of form and the deployment of strong
colors to convey a variety of anxieties and yearnings. The classic phase of the
Expressionist movement lasted from approximately 1905 to 1920 and spread
throughout Europe. Its example would later inform Abstract Expressionism, and
its influence would be felt throughout the remainder of the century in German
art. It was also a critical precursor to the Neo-Expressionist artists of the 1980s.
Exercise 1.
Consult the above “Key Ideas” text and find equivalents to the following:
классический период; появляться; влияние; вдохновлять; противоречивое
отношение; потерянные чувства; использование резких цветов; течения и
направления; подлинность и духовное начало; предшественник; искажение
формы;
академическое
искусство;
широко
распространенное
беспокойство.
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Let us have a look at the picture above.
Der Blaue Reiter (1903)
Artist: Wassily Kandinsky
Artwork description & Analysis: This breakthrough canvas is a deceptively
simple image — a lone rider racing across a landscape — yet it represents a
decisive moment in Kandinsky's developing pictorial language. Here, the sundappled hillside reveals a keen interest in contrasts of light and dark as well as
movement and stillness, all major themes throughout his oeuvre. Constituting a
link between Post-Impressionism and the burgeoning Expressionist movements,
Kandinsky's canvas became the emblem of the expressive possibilities embraced
by the Munich avant-garde. This is the eponymous work from which the
collective derived its name in 1911.
Oil on canvas - Private collection
Exercise 2.
Find equivalents to the following words and phrases from the above text:
выразительные возможности; частная коллекция; контрасты света и
тени; холст, масло; образный язык; обманчиво простой; главная тема.
- The arrival of Expressionism announced new standards in the creation and
judgment of art. Art was now meant to come forth from within the artist, rather
than from a depiction of the external visual world, and the standard for assessing
the quality of a work of art became the character of the artist's feelings rather
than an analysis of the composition.
- Expressionist artists often employed swirling, swaying, and exaggeratedly
executed brushstrokes in the depiction of their subjects. These techniques were
meant to convey the turgid emotional state of the artist reacting to the anxieties
of the modern world.
- Through their confrontation with the urban world of the early twentieth
century, Expressionist artists developed a powerful mode of social criticism in
their serpentine figural renderings and bold colors. Their representations of the
modern city included alienated individuals - a psychological by-product of
recent urbanization - as well as prostitutes, who were used to comment on
capitalism's role in the emotional distancing of individuals within cities.
Exercise 3.
Read the sentences and decide whether they are true or false.
1. According to Expressionists the source of art was to be found in the artist
himself rather than in the outside world.
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2. Conventional reserved brushstrokes were very characteristic of
Expressionist artists.
3. The Expressionists representations of the modern city praised all products
and achievements of recent urbanization.
The Term "Expressionism"
The term "Expressionism" is thought to have been coined in 1910 by
Czech art historian Antonin Matejcek, who intended it to denote the opposite of
Impressionism. Whereas the Impressionists sought to express the majesty of
nature and the human form through paint, the Expressionists, according to
Matejcek, sought only to express inner life, often via the painting of harsh and
realistic subject matter. It should be noted that in the early years of the century
the term was widely used to apply to a variety of styles, including PostImpressionism.
The Russian-French Jewish artist Marc Chagall drew upon currents from
Cubism, Fauvism, and Symbolism to create his own brand of Expressionism in
which he often depicted dreamy scenes of his Belarusian hometown, Vitebsk.
While in Paris during the height of the modernist avant-garde, Chagall
developed a visual language of eccentric motifs: "ghostly figures floating in the
sky, the gigantic fiddler dancing on miniature dollhouses, the livestock and
transparent wombs and, within them, tiny offspring sleeping upside down." In
1914, his work was exhibited in Berlin, and had an impact on the German
Expressionists extending beyond World War I. He never associated his work
with a specific movement, and considered his repertoire to be a vocabulary of
images meaningful to himself, but they inspired many, including the Surrealists.
Pablo Picasso remarked in the 1950s, "When Matisse dies, Chagall will be
the only painter left who understands what colour really is."
Exercise 4.
Find answers to the following questions.
1. How can we describe the difference between Expressionism and
Impressionism?
2. What influenced Marc Chagall in creating his own artistic style?
3. What kind of visual language did Chagall develop?
4. What movement did Chagall associated his work with?
Edvard Munch in Norway
The late nineteenth-century Norwegian Post-Impressionist painter Edvard
Munch emerged as an important source of inspiration for the Expressionists. His
vibrant and emotionally charged works opened up new possibilities for
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introspective expression. In particular, Munch's frenetic canvases expressed the
anxiety of the individual within the newly modernized European society; his
famous painting The Scream (1893) evidenced the conflict between spirituality
and modernity as a central theme of his work. By 1905 Munch's work was well
known within Germany.
The Scream (1893)
Artist: Edvard Munch
Artwork
description
&
Analysis:
Throughout his artistic career, Munch
focused on scenes of death, agony, and
anxiety in distorted and emotionally
charged portraits, all themes and styles that
would be adopted by the Expressionists.
Here, in Munch's most famous painting, he
depicts the battle between the individual
and society. The setting of The Scream
was suggested to the artist while walking
along a bridge overlooking Oslo; as
Munch recalls, "the sky turned as red as
blood. I stopped and leaned against the
fence...shivering with fear. Then I heard
the enormous, infinite scream of nature."
Although Munch did not observe the scene as rendered in his painting, The
Scream evokes the jolting emotion of the encounter and exhibits a general
anxiety toward the tangible world. The representation of the artist's emotional
response to a scene would form the basis of the Expressionists' artistic
interpretations. The theme of individual alienation, as represented in this image
would persist throughout the twentieth century, captivating Expressionist artists
as a central feature of modern life.
Tempera and crayon on cardboard - National Museum, Oslo
Developments.
While certain artists rejected Expressionism, others would continue to
expand upon its innovations as a style. For example, in the 1920s, Kandinsky
transitioned to completely non-objective paintings and watercolors, which
emphasized color balance and archetypal forms, rather than figurative
representation. However, Expressionism would have its most direct impact in
Germany and would continue to shape its art for decades afterwards. After
World War I, Expressionism began to lose impetus and fragment.
The original Expressionist movement's ideas about spirituality,
primitivism, and the value of abstract art would also be hugely influential on an
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array of unrelated movements, including Abstract Expressionism. The
Expressionists' metaphysical outlook and instinctive discomfort with the modern
world impelled them to antagonistic attitudes that would continue to be
characteristic of various avant-garde movements throughout the century.
Exercise 5.
Find answers to the following questions.
1. What were most frequent themes of Munch’s art?
2. Does Munch’s famous The Scream depict an actual scene the artist has
observed?
3. Were there any transitions in Kandinsky artistic development?
4. Was it Denmark where Expressionism was most influential?
5. Can we say that Expressionists lived in a comfortable agreement with the
modern world?
Unit 2
Beginnings of Cubism
“Let them eat their fill of their square pears
on their triangular tables!” Marc Chagall
A watershed moment for the development of Cubism was the posthumous
retrospective of Paul Cézanne's work at the Salon d'Automne in 1907. Cézanne's
use of generic forms to simplify nature was incredibly influential to both Picasso
and Braque. In the previous year, Picasso was also introduced to non-Western
art: seeing Iberian art in Spain, and African-influenced art by Matisse, and at the
Trocadero anthropological museum. What drew Picasso to these artistic
traditions was their use of an abstract or simplified representation of the human
body rather than the naturalistic forms of the European Renaissance tradition.
The Cubism of Picasso and Braque
The close collaboration between Picasso and Braque beginning in 1909
was crucial to the style's genesis. The two artists met regularly to discuss their
progress, and at times it became hard to distinguish the work of one artist from
another (as they liked it). Both were living in the bohemian Montmartre section
of Paris in the years before and during World War I, making their collaboration
easy.
Though Picasso and Braque returned to Cubist forms periodically
throughout their careers and there were some exhibitions of work up until 1925,
the two-man movement did not last much beyond World War I.
8
Further Developments
Cubism spread quickly throughout Europe in the 1910s, as much because
of its systematic approach to rendering imagery as for the openness it offered in
depicting objects in new ways. Critics were split over whether Cubists were
concerned with representing imagery in a more objective manner - revealing
more of its essential character - or whether they were principally interested in
distortion and abstraction.
The movement lies at the root of a host of early twentieth styles including
Constructivism, Futurism and Suprematism. Many important artists went
through a Cubist phase in their development.
Exercise 1.
Answer the questions.
1. Can we say Picasso and Braque were very similar in their Cubism
artworks?
2. What is considered to be the starting point of the Cubism development?
3. Did European Renaissance tradition help to bring Picasso to abstract and
simplified representation of the human body?
4. Do you think distortion and abstraction were ultimate goals of Cubists?
Bottle and Fishes (1910-12), Georges Braque
Artwork description & Analysis:
Braque depicted both bottles and
fishes throughout his entire painting
career, and these objects stand as
markers to differentiate his various
styles. Bottle and Fishes is an
excellent example of Braque's foray
into Analytic Cubism, while he
worked closely with Picasso. This
painting
has
the
restricted
characteristic earth tone palette
rendering barely perceptible objects as
they disintegrate along a horizontal
plane. While there are some diagonal lines, Braque's early paintings tended to
work vertically or horizontally.
Oil on canvas - Tate London
Exercise 4.
Read the above artwork description and find the words that describe the Braque
early artistic style.
9
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907),
Pablo Picasso
This painting was shocking even to
Picasso's closest artist friends both for
its content and its execution. The
subject matter of nude women was not
in itself unusual, but the fact that
Picasso painted the women as
prostitutes in aggressively sexual
postures was novel. Picasso's studies
of Iberian and tribal art is most evident
in the faces of three of the women,
which are rendered as mask-like,
suggesting that their sexuality is not
just aggressive, but also primitive.
Picasso also went further with his spatial experiments by abandoning the
Renaissance illusion of three-dimensionality, instead presenting a radically
flattened picture plane that is broken up into geometric shards, something
Picasso borrowed in part from Paul Cezanne's brushwork. For instance, the leg
of the woman on the left is painted as if seen from several points of view
simultaneously; it is difficult to distinguish the leg from the negative space
around it making it appear as if the two are both in the foreground.
The painting was widely thought to be immoral when it was finally exhibited in
public in 1916. Braque is one of the few artists who studied it intently in 1907,
leading directly to his Cubist collaborations with Picasso. Because Les
Demoiselles predicted some of the characteristics of Cubism, the work is
considered proto or pre Cubism.
Oil on canvas - Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Exercise 2.
Find equivalents to the following words and phrases:
тема; содержание и исполнение; часть композиции; пространственные
эксперименты; передний план; трехмерность.
The ideas in the movement also fed into more popular phenomena, like
Art Deco design and architecture. Later movements such as Minimalism were
also influenced by the Cubist use of the grid, and it is difficult to imagine the
development of non-representational art without the experiments of the Cubists.
Like other paradigm changing artistic movements of twentieth-century art,
like Dada and Pop, Cubism shook the foundations of traditional art making by
10
turning the Renaissance tradition on its head and changing the course of art
history with reverberations that continue into the postmodern era.
Exercise 3.
Point out the questions that are not relevant to the above two passages. Answer
those that are relevant.
1. Was Cubism responsible for any Renaissance tradition abuse?
2. How did Minimalism adepts influence the Cubism experiments?
3. Did Dada and Pop artists have anything to do with shaking the traditional
art foundations?
4. How important was the influence of Art Deco design and architecture on
the American architecture, design and art in the second quarter of the 20th
century?
5. Do you think the development of non-representational art has anything to
do with the experiment of the Cubists?
Summary of Cubism Ideas
- The artists abandoned perspective, which had been used to depict space since
the Renaissance, and they also turned away from the realistic modeling of
figures.
- Cubists explored open form, piercing figures and objects by letting the space
flow through them, blending background into foreground, and showing objects
from various angles. Some historians have argued that these innovations
represent a response to the changing experience of space, movement, and time in
the modern world. This first phase of the movement was called Analytic
Cubism.
- In the second phase of Cubism, Synthetic Cubists explored the use of non-art
materials as abstract signs. Their use of newspaper would lead later historians to
argue that, instead of being concerned above all with form, the artists were also
acutely aware of current events, particularly WWI.
- Cubism paved the way for non-representational art by putting new emphasis
on the unity between a depicted scene and the surface of the canvas. These
experiments would be taken up by the likes of Piet Mondrian, who continued to
explore their use of the grid, abstract system of signs, and shallow space.
Exercise 5.
Answer the questions:
1. How did Cubists treat background and foreground?
2. Give examples of the Cubists going away from the Renaissance painting
techniques achievements?
11
3. Can we say that Cubists tried to stick to some of the current events in their
artwork?
4. How did Cubism pave the way for non-representational art?
Unit 3
Synopsis of Suprematism
Suprematism, the invention of Russian artist Kazimir Malevich, was one
of the earliest and most radical developments in abstract art. Its name derived
from Malevich's belief that Suprematist art would be superior to all the art of the
past, and that it would lead to the "supremacy of pure feeling or perception in
the pictorial arts." Heavily influenced by avant-garde poets, and an emerging
movement in literary criticism, Malevich derived his interest in flouting the rules
of language, in defying reason. He believed that there were only delicate links
between words or signs and the objects they denote, and from this he saw the
possibilities for a totally abstract art. And just as the poets and literary critics
were interested in what constituted literature, Malevich came to be intrigued by
the search for art's barest essentials. It was a radical and experimental project
that at times came close to a strange mysticism. Although the Communist
authorities later attacked the movement, its influence was pervasive in Russia in
the early 1920s, and it was important in shaping Constructivism, just as it has
been in inspiring abstract art to this day.
Exercise 1.
Find equivalents to the following words and phrases:
экспериментальный проект; пренебрежение правилами; абстрактное
искусство; вызов разуму; сущности искусства.
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Beginnings
Suprematism was an art movement founded in Russia during the First
World War. The first hints of it emerged in background and costume sketches
that Kazimir Malevich designed in 1913 for Victory Over the Sun, a Futurist
opera performed in St. Petersburg. While the drawings still have a clear
relationship to Cubo-Futurism (a Russian art movement in which Malevich was
prominently involved), the simple shapes that provide a visual foundation for
Suprematism appear repeatedly. Rich color is also discarded in favor of black
and white, which Malevich later used as a metaphor for creation in his writings.
Of particular importance is the Black Square (c. 1915), which became the
centerpiece of his new movement.
In 1915, the Russian artists Kseniya Boguslavskaya, Ivan Klyun, Mikhail
Menkov, Ivan Puni and Olga Rozanova joined with Kazimir Malevich to form
the Suprematist group. Together, they unveiled their new work to the public at
0.10, The Last Futurist Exhibition of Paintings (1915). Their work feature an
array of geometric shapes suspended above a white or light-colored background.
The variety of shapes, sizes and angles creates a sense of depth in these
compositions, making the squares, circles and rectangles appear to be moving in
space.
- The
Suprematists'
interest in abstraction
was fired by a search
for the 'zero degree' of
painting, the point
beyond which the
medium could not go
without ceasing to be
art. This encouraged
the use of very simple
motifs, since they best
articulated the shape
and flat surface of the
canvases on which they
were painted. (Ultimately, the square, circle, and cross became the
group's favorite motifs.) It also encouraged many Suprematists to
emphasize the surface texture of the paint on canvas, this texture being
another essential quality of the medium of painting.
- Though much Suprematist art can seem highly austere and serious, there
was a strong tone of absurdism running through the movement. One of
Malevich's initial inspirations for the movement was zaum, or
transrational poetry, of some of his contemporaries, something that led
him to the idea of 'zaum painting.'
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- The Russian Formalists, an important and highly influential group of
literary critics, who were Malevich's contemporaries, were opposed to
the idea that language is a simple, transparent vehicle for
communication. They pointed out that words weren't so easily linked to
the objects they denoted. This fostered the idea that art could serve to
make the world fresh and strange, art could make us look at the world in
new ways. Suprematist abstract painting was aimed at doing much the
same, by removing the real world entirely and leaving the viewer to
contemplate what kind of picture of the world is offered by, for instance,
a Black Square (c. 1915).
Concepts and Styles
Suprematist painting abandoned realism, which Malevich considered a
distraction from the transcendental experience that the art was meant to evoke.
Suprematism can be seen as the logical conclusion of Futurism's interest in
movement and Cubism's reduced forms and multiple perspectives. The square,
which Malevich called "the face of a new art," represented the birth of his new
movement, becoming a figurehead to which critics and others artists rallied in
support of the new style. But many others accused it of nihilism: the artist and
critic Alexandre Benois attacked it as a "sermon of nothingness and
destruction."
Malevich published a manifesto to coincide with the 1915 exhibition,
called From Cubism and Futurism to Suprematism in Art. He claimed to have
passed beyond the boundaries of reality into a new awareness. With this, the
motifs in his paintings narrowed to include only the circle, square and rectangle.
Critics have sometimes interpreted these motifs as references to mystical ideas,
and some of Malevich's more florid pronouncements seem to offer support for
this: of his use of the circle, he said, "I have destroyed the ring of the horizon
and escaped from the circle of things"; and he talked of the Black Square as "a
living, royal infant." But, in fact, Malevich scorned symbolism: for him, the
motifs were only building blocks, the most fundamental elements in painting, or,
as he put it, "the zero of form."
Malevich divided the progression of Suprematism into three stages:
"black," "colored," and "white." The black phase marked the beginnings of the
movement, and the 'zero degree' of painting, as exemplified by Black Square.
The colored stage, sometimes referred to as Dynamic Suprematism, focused on
the use of color and shape to create the sensation of movement in space. This
was pursued in depth by Ilya Chasnik, El Lissitzky and Alexander Rodchenko;
El Lissitzky was particularly influenced by Malevich and developed his own
personal style of Suprematism, which he called 'Proun'. The culmination of
Suprematism can be seen in the white stage, exhibited by Malevich during the
Tenth State Exhibition: Non-objective Creation and Suprematism in 1919. His
14
masterpiece, White on White (1918), dispensed with form entirely, representing
only "the idea." This work provoked responses from other artists that led to new
ventures, such as Alexander Rodchenko's Constructivist exploration of the roles
of specific materials in his Black on Black series (1919).
Exercise 2.
Choose your interpretation of the Black Square idea:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
That is the end of all previous Art.
That is a full stop to the artist’s former experiments.
That is a total escape from depicting reality.
That is absorption of all painting styles that existed before.
Life and death have merged into one here.
That is the Universe, and non-parallel edges of the square refer to the
Lobachevski’s geometry and foresee the Einstein’s idea that space and
time bend.
Later Developments
As time went on, the movement's spiritual undertones increasingly defined
it, and although these put it in jeopardy following the Russian Revolution of
1917, the tolerant attitude of the early Communists ensured that its influence
continued. By the late 1920s, however, attitudes had changed, and the
movement lost much of its popularity at home, especially after being condemned
by the Stalinists. Between 1919 and 1927, Malevich stopped painting altogether
to devote himself to his theoretical writings, and following a long hiatus, he
even returned to representational painting.
The introduction of Suprematism to the West during a 1927 Berlin
exhibition was well-received, sparking interest throughout Europe and the
United States. Alfred Barr later brought several of Malevich's Suprematist works
to the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where they were included in
Cubism and Abstract Art (1936), a groundbreaking exhibition that greatly
influenced American modernism. Lissitzky played a key role in the promotion
of Suprematism outside of Russia, having previously exhibited Proun works that
left a deep impression on Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, and possibly even Kandinsky.
El Lissitzky later used Suprematist forms and concepts to great effect in graphic
design and architecture, which helped to shape the Constructionist movement.
Today, these echoes are still seen in contemporary architecture, most famously
in the recent "Suprematist" work of Zaha Hadid.
15
Exercise 3.
Answer the questions.
1. Was the Malevich’s Black Square a symbol of nothingness and
destruction?
2. How did Malevich treat realism?
3. What were the immediate artistic sources of Suprematism?
4. What were the three stages of Suprematism according to Malevich?
5. What could be the starting point of the Suprematism decline in Russia?
6. Who was a key promoter of Malevich’s ideas outside Russia?
7. Who is the most famous modern follower of Suprematism ideas?
Unit 4
Constructivism
Synopsis
Constructivism was the last and most influential modern art movement to
flourish in Russia in the 20th century. It evolved just as the Bolsheviks came to
power in the October Revolution of 1917, and initially it acted as a lightning rod
for the hopes and ideas of many of the most advanced Russian artists who
supported the revolution's goals. It borrowed ideas from Cubism, Suprematism
and Futurism, but at its heart was an entirely new approach to making objects,
one which sought to abolish the traditional artistic concern with composition,
and replace it with 'construction.' Constructivism called for a careful technical
analysis of modern materials, and it was hoped that this investigation would
eventually yield ideas that could be put to use in mass production, serving the
ends of a modern, Communist society. Ultimately, however, the movement
foundered in trying to make the transition from the artist's studio to the factory.
Some continued to insist on the value of abstract, analytical work, and the value
of art per se; these artists had a major impact on spreading Constructivism
throughout Europe. Others, meanwhile, pushed on to a new but short-lived and
disappointing phase known as Productivism, in which artists worked in industry.
Russian Constructivism was in decline by the mid 1920s, partly a victim of the
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Bolshevik regime's increasing hostility to avant-garde art. But it would continue
to be an inspiration for artists in the West, sustaining a movement called
International Constructivism which flourished in Germany in the 1920s, and
whose legacy endured into the 1950s.
Exercise 1.
Find the Russian equivalents to the following words and phrases:
art per se; artistic concern; legacy; new approach to making objects; mass
production; “construction”; inspiration; decline.
Concepts and Styles
Constructivism developed side by side with Suprematism, the two major
modern art forms to come out of Russia in the 20th century. But unlike
Suprematism, whose concerns with form and abstraction often seem tinged with
mysticism, Constructivism firmly embraced the new social and cultural
developments that grew out of World War I and the October Revolution of
1917. Concerned with the use of 'real materials in real space', the movement
sought to use art as a tool for the common good, much in line with the
Communist principles of the new Russian regime. Many of the Russian
Constructivist works from this period involve projects in architecture, interior
and fashion design, ceramics, typography and graphics.
Many of the pioneers in Constructivism had also studied Suprematist
ideas, but they increasingly experimented with three-dimensional designs. They
also began to attack traditional forms of art, which it was thought
Constructivism could supplant: painting was officially declared "dead" at the '5
x 5 = 25' exhibition, where Aleksandra Ekster, Lyubov Popova, Alexander
Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova, and Alexander Vesnin each presented five
works. Paintings were included, but Popova declared that they should only be
considered as designs for eventual constructions. Rodchenko's Black on Black
series of paintings, however, made a statement. Directly confronting Malevich's
White on White, which was meant to be the ultimate representation of a new
reality, Rodchenko's black paintings announced the end of an era "Representation is finished; it is time to construct."
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Design for the Monument
to the Third International
(1919-1920)
Artist: Vladimir Tatlin
Artwork description &
Analysis: Monument to
the Third International,
also sometimes known
simply as Tatlin's Tower,
is the artist's most famous
work, as well as the most
important spur to the
formation
of
the
Constructivist movement.
The Tower, which was
never fully realized, was
intended to act as a fully
functional
conference
space and propaganda
center for the Communist
Third International, or
Comintern. Its steel spiral frame was to stand at 1,300 feet, making it the tallest
structure in the world at the time - taller, and more functional—and therefore
more beautiful by Constructivist standards—than the Eiffel Tower. There were
to be three glass units, a cube, cylinder and cone, which would have different
spaces for meetings, and these would rotate once per year, month, and day,
respectively. For Tatlin, steel and glass were the essential materials of modern
construction. They symbolized industry, technology and the machine age, and
the constant motion of the geometrically shaped units embodied the dynamism
of modernity. Although the tower was commissioned as a monument to
revolution, and although it was given considerable prominence by the Bolshevik
regime, it was never built, and it has continued to be an emblem of failed
utopian aspirations for many generations of artists since.
Oil on canvas - Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
Exercise 2.
Answer the questions.
1. Where did Constructivism borrow ideas?
2. Were there any other important art forms apart from Constructivism to
evolve in Russia in the 20th century?
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3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Was it composition or construction that prevailed in that movement?
Explain the idea of “real materials in real space”.
Was there any ideological foundation for the Constructivism aspirations?
What were the differences between Suprematism and Constructivism?
What did Tatlin consider the most essential materials for modern
construction?
8. Did art objects functionality matter anything to Constructivists?
Textile Design (c. 1924)
Artist: Lyubov Popova
Artwork description & Analysis: Popova
first emerged as an Impressionist painter, but
she was later drawn into Constructivist and
Suprematist circles. By 1921 she had
abandoned painting to pursue the
Constructivist ambition to leave behind
traditional art forms and to make work for
mass production. She concentrated on textile
design, such as in this work, Popova uses
repeating geometric patterns which were
thought more appropriate to modern life and
mass production than the floral designs that
had previously been popular for such
textiles. The intersecting circles and spacing of the stripes add tension and
movement within the pattern, while also visually creating the effect of different
textures. Popova's prominence within Constructivism is indicative of the
significant role played by women in driving the movement's concerns; other
avant-garde movements of the period were dominated by men.
Pencil and ink on paper - Private collection
Later Developments
Echoes of Constructivism came to be seen in modern sculpture, even in
the work of Henry Moore, who was also inspired by natural forms. The
movement also had an impact in the United States, where the sculptor George
Rickey became the first to write a comprehensive guide to Constructivism, in
1967. Today, the legacy of Russian Constructivism flourishes in the graphic arts
and advertising. Street artists, such as Shepard Fairey, have also gained
recognition by employing the propagandistic style of the Russian Constructivists
in their work.
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Exercise 3.
Read the sentences and decide whether they are true or false.
1. The Tatlin Tower if built would be higher and more beautiful than the
Eiffel Tower.
2. Concrete and steel were the materials that Constructivists considered the
best for modern construction.
3. Creating for mass production was the ultimate ambition for many
Constructivism artists.
4. All avant-garde movements of the period were dominated my men.
5. Modern graphic arts and advertising follow classic tradition rather than
any 20th century developments.
Unit 5
Surrealism
Synopsis
The Surrealist artists sought to channel the unconscious as a means to
unlock the power of the imagination. Disdaining rationalism and literary
realism, and powerfully influenced by psychoanalysis, the Surrealists believed
the rational mind repressed the power of the imagination, weighting it down
with taboos. Influenced also by Karl Marx, they hoped that the psyche had the
power to reveal the contradictions in the everyday world and spur on revolution.
Their emphasis on the power of personal imagination puts them in the tradition
of Romanticism, but unlike their forbears, they believed that revelations could
be found on the street and in everyday life. The Surrealist impulse to tap the
unconscious mind, and their interests in myth and primitivism, went on to shape
many later movements, and the style remains influential to this today.
Key Ideas
- André Breton defined Surrealism as "psychic automatism in its pure state, by
which one proposes to express - verbally, by means of the written word, or in
any other manner - the actual functioning of thought." What Breton is proposing
is that artists bypass reason and rationality by accessing their unconscious mind.
In practice, these techniques became known as automatism or automatic writing,
which allowed artists to forgo conscious thought and embrace chance when
creating art.
- The work of Sigmund Freud was profoundly influential for Surrealists,
particularly his book, The Interpretation of Dreams (1899). Freud legitimized
the importance of dreams and the unconscious as valid revelations of human
emotion and desires; his exposure of the complex and repressed inner worlds of
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sexuality, desire, and violence provided a theoretical basis for much of
Surrealism.
- Surrealist imagery is probably the most recognizable element of the movement,
yet it is also the most elusive to categorize and define. Each artist relied on their
own recurring motifs arisen through their dreams or/and unconscious mind. At
its basic, the imagery is outlandish, perplexing, and even uncanny, as it is meant
to jolt the viewer out of their comforting assumptions. Nature, however, is the
most frequent imagery: Max Ernst was obsessed with birds and had a bird alter
ego, Salvador Dalí's works often include ants or eggs, and Joan Miró relied
strongly on vague biomorphic imagery.
Exercise 1.
Find equivalents to the following words and phrases:
вскрывать противоречия; предшественник; сила воображения;
передавать подсознательное; диковинный; поздние течения; самый
узнаваемый элемент; одержимость; откровение; повторяющийся мотив.
Beginnings
Surrealism grew out of the Dada movement, which was also in rebellion
against middle-class complacency. Artistic influences, however, came from
many different sources. The most immediate influence for several of the
Surrealists was Giorgio de Chirico, their contemporary who, like them, used
bizarre imagery with unsettling juxtapositions. They were also drawn to artists
from the recent past who were interested in primitivism, the naive, or fantastical
imagery, such as Gustave Moreau, Arnold Bocklin, Odilon Redon, and Henri
Rousseau. Even artists from as far back as the Renaissance, such as Giuseppe
Arcimboldo and Hieronymous Bosch, provided inspiration in so far as these
artists were not overly concerned with aesthetic issues involving line and color,
but instead felt compelled to create what Surrealists thought of as the "real."
Exercise 2.
Explain the following expressions in your own words:
automatism or automatic writing; to tap the unconscious mind; to embrace
chance when creating art; to bypass reason and rationality.
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The Accommodations of Desire (1929)
Artist: Salvador Dalí
Artwork description & Analysis: Painted
in the summer of 1929 just after Dalí
went to Paris for his first Surrealist
exhibition, The Accommodations of
Desire is a prime example of Dalí's
ability to render his vivid and bizarre
dreams with seemingly journalistic
accuracy. He developed the paranoid-critical method, which involved systematic
irrational thought and self-induced paranoia as a way to access his unconscious.
He referred to the resulting works as "hand-painted dream photographs" because
of their realism coupled with their eerie dream quality. The narrative of this
work stems from Dalí's anxieties over his affair with Gala Eluard, wife of artist
Paul Eluard. The lumpish white "pebbles" depict his insecurities about his future
with Gala, circling around the concepts of terror and decay. While The
Accommodations of Desire is an exposé of Dalí's deepest fears, it combines his
typical hyper-realistic painting style with more experimental collage techniques.
The lion heads are glued onto the canvas, and are believed to have been cut from
a children's book.
Oil and cut-and-pasted printed paper on canvas - Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York
The Human Condition (1933)
Artist: Rene Magritte
Artwork description & Analysis:
Magritte's works tend to be intellectual,
often dealing with visual puns and the
relation between a representation and the
thing itself. In The Human Condition a
canvas sits on an easel before a curtained
window and reproduces exactly the scene
outside the window that would be behind
the canvas, thus the image on the easel in
a sense becomes the scene, not just a
reproduction of the landscape. There is in
effect no difference between the two as
both are fabrications of the artist. The
hyperrealist painting style often used by
Surrealists makes the odd setup seem
dreamlike.
Oil on canvas - Los Angeles County Museum of Art
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Concepts and Styles
Surrealism shared much of the anti-rationalism of Dada, the movement out
of which it grew. The original Parisian Surrealists used art as a reprieve from
violent political situations and to address the unease they felt about the world's
uncertainties. By employing fantasy and dream imagery, artists generated
creative works in a variety of media that exposed their inner minds in eccentric,
symbolic ways, uncovering anxieties and treating them analytically through
visual means.
Exercise 3.
Find the Russian equivalents to the following words and expressions:
narrative; collage techniques; bizarre dreams; hyper-realistic painting style; oil
and cut-and-pasted printed paper on canvas; visual pun; visual means; dream
imagery; a variety of media; a reprieve from violent political situations.
Surrealist Paintings
There were two styles or methods that distinguished Surrealist painting.
Artists such as Dalí, Tanguy, and Magritte painted in a hyper-realistic style in
which objects were depicted in crisp detail and with the illusion of threedimensionality, emphasizing their dream-like quality. The color in these works
was often either saturated (Dalí) or monochromatic (Tanguy), both choices
conveying a dream state.
Several Surrealists also relied heavily on automatism or automatic writing
as a way to tap into the unconscious mind. Artists such as Miró and Ernst used
various doodling techniques to create unlikely and often outlandish imagery
including collage, doodling, frottage, decalcomania, and grattage. Artists such as
Arp also created collages as stand-alone works.
Hyperrealism and automatism were not mutually exclusive. Miro, for
example, often used both methods in one work. In either case, however the
subject matter was arrived at or depicted, it was always bizarre - meant to
disturb and baffle.
Exercise 4.
Answer the questions.
1. What is a hyper-realistic style that some Surrealists were sticking to?
2. Were hyper-realism and automatism mutually exclusive?
3. Were there a prevailing colour and tone in the Surrealist paintings?
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Conclusion
Here we have focused on the most prominent and well-known movements
and artists of the 1st part of the XX century art history. The views and opinions
can be very different especially as related to the Modern Art but we hope the
presented texts and illustrations should give a good picture of what was of
interest and influence in th 20th Century Art History.
You should find it instructive and entertaining to get to know the major
facts and theories of different arts movements. We are sure it would help you to
find your favourites and allow you to speak about art in English with better
confidence.
List of references and recommended links:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
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http://www.theartstory.org
http://www.tate.org.uk/learn/online-resources/glossary
https://www.artsy.net/gene/20th-century-art
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art
https://www.guggenheim.org/
www.nga.gov
https://owlcation.com/humanities/20th-Century-Art-Movements-withTimeline
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