Exhibition

The Visual Revolution

9 Jul 2014 – 29 Aug 2014

Regular hours

Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
11:00 – 17:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00

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Russian Avant-Garde Photography, Alexander Rodchenko & the Vkhutemas Workshop

About

On the occasion of the 2014 UK-Russia year of culture, Richard Saltoun Gallery will be presenting a special selection of works by leading practitioners of Russian avant-garde photography, including Alexander Rodchenko and the Vkhutemas Workshop.

This comprehensive exhibition is drawn from a single renowned collection, which comprises more than 1,500 vintage photographs. The collection was built in the early part of the 21st century and includes photographs from the Constructivist-Suprematist period (1920s), the Socialist-Realist period (1930s) and World War II photography. There are over 100 photographers represented, with a significant number by Max Alpert, Simon Fridland, Naum S Granovski, Yevgeni Khaldei, Gustav Klutsis, Alexander Rodchenko, Akady Shishkin, Varvara Stepanova and Georgi Zelma.

Though used in Soviet Russia since the turn of the twentieth century, it was not until the Social Revolution of 1917 that the photographic medium was privileged over painting. Its documentary and artistic capabilities were quickly exploited for State propagandistic purposes: portraying a ?truthful? depiction of everyday life, culture, and architecture of the New Soviet State.

One of the greatest innovators of the XX century avant-gardes and an acknowledged leader of Russian Constructivism, Alexander Rodchenko?s artistic oeuvre has influenced design, architecture and ?photo-art?. A student at the Stroganov art school in Moscow, he started using photography in 1924 and it was during the first Five-Year plan (1928-32) that he truly exploited it as a medium. Recognizing the capabilities of the photographic image, he revolutionized the way it was used as a medium. Inspired by Moholy-Nagy?s experimental photographic technique, Rodchenko merged traditional formal elements with innovative perspectives: ?bird?s eye?, ?worm?s eye? views and the application of diagonal perspectives to street scenes. Photography was for him a tool to depict the discrepancy between 'high' and 'low' culture in Soviet society, balancing formal concerns with a focus on documenting contemporary social and political life.

From intimate portraits to street scenes, from dynamic architectural analysis to photomontage, his revolutionary practice re-established the role of photography and of the photographer himself. Key works to be included are Woman With a Baby (1928), Portrait of Mayakovsky (1924) and Portrait of Varvara Stepanova (1925). Rodchenko has deeply influenced later generations of artists, through his own work as well as through his tutelage as a leading professor of leading Moscow art school, the Vkhutemas Workshop.

The Vkhutemas Workshop had a brief but significant existence, established 1920 and dissolved in 1930. Its impact both at the time and now is tremendous, as out of the Workshop originated constructivism, rationalism and suprematism. Though contemporaneous to the Bauhaus (1919-1933), the Vkhutemas Workshop has never achieved the same status or degree of prominence but its legacy endures within art historical circles. A curated selection of works by the Vkhutemas Workshop to be exhibited include photographs by leading artists Alexander Rodchenko, Gustav Klutsis and Varvara Stepanova, alongside works by lesser-known students at the school.

ALEXANDER RODCHENKO (1891-1956)
Considered one of the great innovators of the twentieth-century avant-garde, Rodchenko continues to influence future generations of artists. An artist under the intellectually exploratory Lenin years as well as under the strict cultural regime of Stalin, his work consistently remained daring and innovative. Major recent exhibitions include Alexander Rodchenko (Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome, 2012), Rodchenko and Popova: Defining Constructivism (Tate Modern, London, 2009), Alexander Rodchenko (Hayward Gallery, London, 2008).

VKHUTEMAS WORKSHOP (1920-1930)
Created by Vladimir Lenin in 1920 under the name 'Higher Art and Technical Studios?, the school was formed by the merging of the Stroganov School of Industrial Art and the Moscow School of Painting. Abandoning traditional curriculum and encouraging the avant-garde, the school quickly became the leading art school in the post-revolutionary period. Key instructors were: Liubov Popova, Aleksandra Exter, Nadezhda Udaltsova, and Alexander Rodchenko. Works by the Vkhutemas Workshop are included in the collections of Tate, UK; Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA; and the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, New York, USA; and the Getty, LA, USA, amongst others.

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