The Artist as Producer: Russian Constructivism in RevolutionUniversity of California Press, 02.05.2005 - 257 Seiten The Artist as Producer reshapes our understanding of the fundamental contribution of the Russian avant-garde to the development of modernism. Focusing on the single most important hotbed of Constructivist activity in the early 1920s—the Institute of Artistic Culture (INKhUK) in Moscow—Maria Gough offers a powerful reinterpretation of the work of the first group of artists to call themselves Constructivists. Her lively narrative ranges from famous figures such as Aleksandr Rodchenko to others who are much less well known, such as Karl Ioganson, a key member of the state-funded INKhUK whose work paved the way for an eventual dematerialization of the integral art object. Through the mining of untapped archives and collections in Russia and Latvia and a close reading of key Constructivist works, Gough highlights fundamental differences among the Moscow group in their handling of the experimental new sculptural form—the spatial construction—and of their subsequent shift to industrial production. The Artist as Producer upends the standard view that the Moscow group's formalism and abstraction were incompatible with the sociopolitical imperatives of the new Communist state. It challenges the common equation of Constructivism with functionalism and utilitarianism by delineating a contrary tendency toward non-determinism and an alternate orientation to process rather than product. Finally, the book counters the popular perception that Constructivism failed in its ambition to enter production by presenting the first-ever case study of how a Constructivist could, and in fact did, operate within an industrial environment. The Artist as Producer offers provocative new perspectives on three critical issues—formalism, functionalism, and failure—that are of central importance to our understanding not only of the Soviet phenomenon but also of the European vanguards more generally. |
Inhalt
| 1 | |
| 21 | |
| 61 | |
3 Formulating Production | 101 |
4 The Death of the Object | 121 |
The Konstruktor in Production | 151 |
Constructivism in Revolution | 191 |
Glossary and Abbreviations | 195 |
Notes | 199 |
Selected Bibliography | 231 |
List of Illustrations | 245 |
Index | 249 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Aleksandr Rodchenko argues artist Arvatov Avant-Garde Babichev Berkholce Blitsau Bolsheviks Boris Brik Cesis cold structure Communist Composition and Construction Constructivist Costakis collection culture debate Decline drawings Easel to Machine economic El Lissitzky elements engineering exhibition factory factory's faktura gallery GARF f Gosudarstvennyi Group of Constructivists industrial INKhUK INKhUK i rannii invention inventor iskusstvo Kandinsky Karl Ioganson Kushner labor Laboratory of Constructivism Latvian Lenin Lissitzky Lodder material Medunetskii Moscow Moskvy f Mossredprom Narkompros Nikolai Tarabukin nonobjective Notes to Pages object OBMOKHU organization Osip Brik painterly painting party Petrograd Photograph courtesy principle problem productivist productivist platform proun radical reconstruction Red Technics Representation Revolution RKP(b role Sergei Shchukin Slavophiles Soviet spatial constructions Spengler Suprematism Tarabukin Tatlin theory Thessaloníki tion trans TsGAOD g TsMAM g Varvara Stepanova Viacheslav Koleichuk VKHUTEMAS Vladimir Stenberg Vladimir Tatlin workers Yve-Alain Bois Zasedanie Biuro Iacheiki zavoda Krasnyi Prokatchik руб
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 46 - As therefore, in the other imitative arts, the imitation is one when the object imitated is one, so the plot, being an imitation of an action, must imitate one action and that a whole, the structural union of the parts being such that, if any one of them is displaced or removed, the whole will be disjointed and disturbed.
Seite 140 - Civilizations are the most external and artificial states of which a species of developed humanity is capable. They are a conclusion, the thing-become succeeding the thing-becoming, death following life, rigidity following expansion, intellectual age and the stone-built petrifying world-city following motherearth and the spiritual childhood of Doric and Gothic. They are an end, irrevocable, yet by inward necessity reached again and again.
Seite 221 - Harry Braverman, Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1974), pp.
Seite 152 - The use and fabrication of instruments of labour, although existing in the germ among certain species of animals, is specifically characteristic of the human labour-process, and Franklin therefore defines man as a tool-making animal. Relics of bygone instruments of labour possess the same importance for the investigation of extinct economic forms of society, as do fossil bones for the determination of extinct species of animals.
Seite 46 - And a confirmation of this is to be seen in the fact that Wagner's new music lacks the chief characteristic of every true work of art; namely, such entirety and completeness that the smallest alteration in its form would disturb the meaning of the whole work. In a true work of art — poem, drama, picture, song, or symphony — it is impossible to extract one line, one scene, one figure, or one bar from its place and put it in another, without infringing the significance of the whole work ; just...
Seite x - Office and the Office of the Vice President for Research at the University of Michigan, as well as the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy.
Seite 134 - Europe" alone, and the complex of ideas resulting from it, that our historical consciousness has come to link Russia with the West in an utterly baseless unity— a mere abstraction derived from the reading of books— that has led to immense real consequences.
Seite 66 - The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Acquisition made possible through the extraordinary efforts of George and Zinaida Costakis, and through the Nate B. and Frances Spingold, Matthew H. and Erna Putter, and Enid A. Haupt Funds 15. Installation view of the third Obmokhu exhibition, Moscow, May 1921 position" and "construction," particularly the attempts to define the latter.
Seite x - Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art, Washington.
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