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Monthly Archives: August 2016

In the next few posts, I will put up photos of Russian modern art that are on display in the Tretyakov Gallery on Krymsky Val (Третьяковская галерея на Крымском Валу) – a branch of the State Tretyakov Gallery. This is part 2, and part one is here.

Kasimir Malevich – a pioneer of geometric abstract art and the originator of the avant-garde Suprematist movement.

Black square (1915) helped launched the concept of Suprematist.

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In this section of the gallery, on display are Russian avant-garde masters from the 1900s-1920s.

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Liubov Popova – Painterly architectonics.

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More Liubov Popova.

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Even more Popova.

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Ilya Chashnick

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I am particularly keen on the graphical work by El Lissitzky. His work greatly influenced the Bauhaus and constructivist movements, and he experimented with production techniques and stylistic devices that would go on to dominate 20th-century graphic design.

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This is a small but interesting collection.

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Olga Rozanova

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This looks like something that could be made by Vasily Kandinsky but it is by Alexander Volkov.

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There was a corner full of abstract sculptures.

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Don’t forget to come back for the next post.

In this and the next five posts, I will put up photos of Russian art that are on view in the Tretyakov Gallery on Krymsky Val (Третьяковская галерея на Крымском Валу) – a branch of the State Tretyakov Gallery.

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As stated in an earlier post here, this gallery only exhibits 20th century Russian art.

Vladimir Tatlin, “A model”, 1913. He was a founder of Russian Constructivism.

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On display are Russian avant-garde masters from the 1900s-1920s who are famous internationally, such as Kasimir Malevich, Vasily Kandinsky,  Marc Chagall, Pavel Filonov and Liubov Popova.

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This section is titled from cubism to geometric abstraction.

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According to the museum guide, the main result of adaptation of Cubism in Russia was Constructivism and Suprematism.

By Lyubov Popova.

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This could have been a piece by Léger.

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and this …

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There is a piece – Over The Town by Marc Chagall.

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And a surprising detail of this painting, on the lower left corner is …

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Another by Marc Chagall.

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Cezanne-esque, it is by Ilya Mashkov painted in 1910.

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There are so many more pieces by artists who are not well-recognized in the west, and they are worth seeing but not easily seen.

More paintings to come in the next few posts.

These are the photos I (Chris) took and posted on Facebook. The series was started in March of 2013. There is no theme – just something random and visually interesting. We gave each a title and noted where it was taken (to the extent we could remember the city).

random photo #236 – gang – Köln

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random photo  #237 -bogart & bacall – são paulo

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random photo #198 – just the 2 of us – Barcelona

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random photo #199 – mr. cat – Brooklyn

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random photo #200 – stare – Milanostaring back-1

random photo #201 – princess & horse – Milano

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random photo #202 – fading- San Juan

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random photo #203 – old word processor – Milano

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random photo #204 – wheels – Miami

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random photo #205 – gravity – Milano

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If you are interested in seeing other Random Photos, click on the  random  tag on the left.
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Since I had limited time in Moscow, I went to one museum – the Tretyakov Gallery on Krymsky Val (Третьяковская галерея на Крымском Валу) – a branch of the State Tretyakov Gallery.

Entrance to Park Kultury (Gorky Park)

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The main gallery State Tretyakov Gallery is a huge complex, very popular, and shows Russian art from the 11th to the early 20th centuries. The gallery’s building on Krymsky Val houses the only permanent exhibition of 20th century Russian art in the country. Click here for the main gallery’s web site, from there you can navigate to the page about the Krymsky Val branch.

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The Krymsky Val branch of the gallery is located in a park of arts – Muzeon (МУЗЕОН) – between the Park Kultury and the Oktyabrskaya metro stations.

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I walked from Oktyabrskaya, passed the entrance to Gorky Park (Park Kultury as the locals know it) to reach this park next to the Moskva river.

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It was a sunny but chilly March day. There were lots of people about because the building that houses the gallery also has a wing that serves as an exhibition hall. And there was something going on  –  ? – they would let me in if I sign some form to order a magazine and give them my email address … not worth it.

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The building is a huge rectangular box.

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Main entrance

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The lobby is very spacious, open and sunny.

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The gallery has a small coffee area and book/souvenir shop – really quite small relative to the amount of art the gallery is displaying. It seemed like a communist effort in commerce when one compares it with the shops in museums in the west.

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The gallery management was also very particular as to what can be carried inside – the rule was strictly enforced by the docent.

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However, photography without a flash is not prohibited. Hence, I will use a few later posts to show some Russian art that are not easily seen outside.

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On the first floor before one goes further upstairs to the gallery is this familiar model/sculpture by Vladimir Taltlin for the project for the Monument to the Third International (1919–20). It was a design for a grand monumental building in St. Petersburg that was never built.

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Models of this hypothetical building have been erected also in the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, the Musée National d’Art Moderne at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, and the Royal Academy of Arts, London.

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This branch of the Tretyakov Gallery displays works by Russian avant-garde masters from the 1900s-1920s who are famous all over the world, such as K.Malevich, V.Kandinsky,  M.Chagall, P.Filonov and L.Popova.

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More artwork to come in later posts.

These are the photos I (Chris) took and posted on Facebook. The series was started in March of 2013. There is no theme – just something random and visually interesting. We gave each a title and noted where it was taken (to the extent we could remember the city).

random photo #226 – david’s – Orleans

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random photo  #227 – neon trap – milano

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random photo #228 – creepy – Saumur

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random photo #229 – around midnight – Orleans

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random photo #230 – worn – Chenonceau
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random photo #231 – fluor 2.0 – Troyes

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random photo #232 – graffiti girl – saõ paulo

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random photo #232 bis – graffiti girl in situ – saõ paulo
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random photo #233 – sleeping cat – Turquant

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random photo #234 – engineered – Milano

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random photo #235 – tree – Orleans

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If you are interested in seeing other Random Photos, click on the  random  tag on the left.
We have nothing to do with the ads below.