The exhibition is prompted by an extraordinary gift to MoMA of over 1,000 Russian avant-garde illustrated books from The Judith Rothschild Foundation, New York. The gift is the largest to the Department of Prints and Illustrated Books since Abby Aldrich Rockefeller established the collection in the 1940s with her donation of 1,600 prints.
1910-1934
ORGANIZATION The exhibition is organized by Deborah
Wye, Chief Curator of Prints and Illustrated Books, The Museum of
Modern Art, and Margit Rowell, Guest Curator.
CONTENT The Russian Avant-Garde Book, 1910-1934 is
prompted by an extraordinary gift to MoMA of over 1,000
Russian avant-garde illustrated books from The Judith
Rothschild Foundation, New York.
The gift is the largest to the Department
of Prints and Illustrated Books since Abby Aldrich Rockefeller established
the collection in the 1940s with her donation of 1,600 prints. The
Rothschild gift represents all the significant artistic developments of the
period and features works by major artists including Kazimir Malevich,
Olga Rozanova, Natalia Goncharova, El Lissitzky, Aleksandr
Rodchenko, and many others. It also encompasses areas of special interest
to members of the Russian avant-garde, including childrens books
and Judaica. This comprehensive resource has been
characterized by experts in the field as among the most significant collections of
its kind worldwide.
The Rothschild gift joins over 400 works from the Russian avant-garde
period already in the Museums collections
of painting and sculpture, drawings, photography, film, architecture
and design, prints and illustrated books, as well as the library.
MoMAs founding director,
Alfred H. Barr, Jr., initiated the
Museums interest in this crucial period
in the history of modern art.
The Russian Avant-Garde Book, 1910-1934
features 300 books
and is the most comprehensive exhibition
ever devoted exclusively to the
illustrated book during this enormously
creative period. The books will
be displayed in special vitrines and will
allow for viewing of both front
and back covers. Innovative mountings will
display books in upright
positions and multiple copies of books
will be open to various pages.
Computer animations will allow for viewing
several of the most important
examples in their entirety. In addition, a
reading area will allow visitors to
consult facsimile copies of many of the
books.
It is widely recognized that Russian
avant-garde artists experimentation
was fundamental to the development of
abstraction in the early years of
this century. The 1917 Revolution brought
about a complete
transformation of the artists role in
Russian society with utilitarianism
defining the new cultural climate. The
exhibition is organized around three
major themes:
A Slap in the Face of Public Taste
The first section is titled after an early
manifesto by artists and poets, in
which they responded to what they
considered the stultifying conventions
of academic taste and bourgeois
sensibility. Natalia Goncharova, Mikhail
Larionov, Olga Rozanova, Kazimir Malevich,
among others,
collaborated with writers and poets,
including Aleksei Kruchenykh,
Velimir Khlebnikov, and Vasilii Kamenskii,
to forge a new language of
abstraction through experimentation with
Cubo-Futurism, Primitivism,
and Rayonism. Many of these poets and
painters practiced both
mediums, and most were friends, siblings,
or spouses; collaboration on
books was one important result of this
creative ferment. Early books
were intended to shock the reader with
variously sized pages made of
coarse papers, illustrations entwined with
printed, hand-written, and
rubber-stamped text, as well as
provocative covers.
Transform the World!
The second section expands on the
developments of the earlier period.
Artists turned to book design with great
optimism to reach the masses.
In both paintings and printed treatises,
Malevich pushed abstraction to its
limit in his development of Suprematism,
conceived as a metaphysical
visual metaphor for heralding the new
world. Aleksandr Rodchenko and
El Lissitzky were major artistic voices in
the development of
Constructivism, which focused on the
rational and machine-made and
came to symbolize a new future. Typography
became an important
aspect of Constructivism, often combined
with bold black and red
abstract designs. Poets such as Vladimir
Mayakovsky, who was also an
artist, played an integral role in the
interdisciplinary development of
illustrated books during this period.
Photography was also a primary
vehicle of communication, and photomontage
dominated many covers
and illustrations.
Building Socialism: Agitation Art
The final section of the exhibition
presents the variety of ways the art of
the book was used to serve the Soviet
governments agenda. Journals
showcased modern Soviet architecture with
covers of bold graphic
design. Trade catalogues promoted Soviet
industry with innovative
layouts and typographical design.
Magazines designed by avant-garde
artists utilized photography and
photomontage to spread the message of
Soviet modernization and progress to the
broadest possible audience.
Innovative works by Lissitzky and
Rodchenko, as well as by other
artists including Varvara Stepanova,
Solomon Telingater, Gustav Klutsis
and the Stenberg brothers, demonstrate a
continued experimentation
with the book format. The exhibition ends
with the notorious 1934
decree by Stalin that only Socialist
Realism would be tolerated. Thus, a
remarkable period of innovation in the
production of illustrated books
came to a close.
PUBLICATION
A major publication illustrating all the
books in the exhibition will
accompany the exhibition. In addition to
over 600 illustrations, the
catalogue will contain essays by the
co-curators and other specialists:
Jared Ash, Nina Gurianova, and Gerald
Janecek. These will include an
overview of the Russian avant-garde book
in the context of the history of
modern illustrated books; studies of the
book both before and after the
1917 Revolution; and texts on specific
stylistic and literary issues. The
documentary portion of the book will
include a complete checklist of all
the books in the gift from The Judith
Rothschild Foundation. There will
also be a comprehensive bibliography and
index.
EDUCATION
A symposium will be organized for students
and specialists. Programs
for the general public will include
Gallery Talks by specially trained
lecturers offered free of charge. An
illustrated brochure will be available
to all visitors free of charge at both the
Lobby Desk and at the entrance
to the galleries. A special exhibition sub
site will be developed for the
MoMA Web site
Image: Solomon Telingater. Slovo predostavliaetsia Kirsanovu (Kirsanov Has the
'Right of Word) by Semen Kirsanov.
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