Varvara Stepanova

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1920s. Rodchenko and Stepanova
1920s. Rodchenko and Stepanova

Varvara Fyodorovna Stepanova (Russian: Варвара Фëдоровна Степанова 1894-1958), was a Russian artist associated with the 'Constructivist' movement.

She came from peasant origins but was fortunate enough to get an education at Kazan School of Art, Odessa. There she met her life-long friend and collaborator Alexander Rodchenko. In the years before the Russian Revolution of 1917 they shared an apartment in Moscow with Wassily Kandinsky and through him met Aleksandra Ekster and Liubov Popova. These artists became some of the main figures in the Russian avant-garde. The new abstract art in Russia which began around 1909, was a culmination of influences from Cubism, Italian Futurism and traditional peasant art. She designed Cubo-Futurist work for several artists' books.

In the years following the revolution, Stepanova contributed work to the Fifth State Exhibition and the Tenth State Exhibition, both in 1919. In 1920 came a division between painters like Kasimir Malevich who continued to paint with the idea that art was a spiritual activity, and those who believed that they must work directly for the revolutionary development of the society. Stepanova declared in her text for the exhibition 5x5=25, held in Moscow in 1921:

'Composition is the contemplative approach of the artist. Technique and Industry have confronted art with the problem of construction as an active process and not reflective. The 'sanctity' of a work as a single entity is destroyed. The museum which was the treasury of art is now transformed into an archive'.

The term 'Constructivist' was by then being used by the artists themselves to describe the direction their work was taking. The theatre was another area where artists were able to communicate new artistic and social ideas. Stepanova designed the sets for The Death of Tarelkin in 1922. She carried out her ideal of engaging with industrial production in the following year when she, with Popova, became designer of textiles at the Tsindel (the First State Textile Factory) near Moscow, and in 1924 became professor of textile design at the Vkhutemas (Higher Technical Artistic Studios) while continuing typography, book design and contributing to the magazine LEF.

[edit] Sources

  • The Russian Experiment in Art, Camilla Gray, Thames and Hudson,1976
  • Avant-garde Russe, Andrei Nakov, Art Data, 1986

[edit] External links

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