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12 Cards in this Set
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Cubo-futurism |
main school of painting and sculpture practiced by the Russian Futurists. When Aristarkh Lentulov returned from Paris in 1913 and exhibited his works in Moscow, the Russian Futurist painters adopted the forms of Cubism and combined them with the Italian Futurists' representation of movement. |
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Russian Futurism |
Russian Futurism, like Italian Futurism, began as a revolt against the symbolist movement in Russia. The Russian Futurists split into two sub-schools: Cubo-Futurism and Ego-Futurism. |
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Vladmir Mayakovsky |
Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovsky was a Russian Soviet poet, playwright, artist, and actor. |
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The Third International |
The Communist International published a theoretical magazine in a variety of European languages from 1919 to 1943. The Communist International, abbreviated as Comintern and also known as the Third International(1919–1943), was an international communist organization that advocated world communism. |
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Russian revolution |
"Russian Revolution" is the collective term for a pair of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which dismantled the Tsarist autocracy and led to the eventual rise of the Soviet Union. |
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Constructivism |
a style or movement in which assorted mechanical objects are combined into abstract mobile structural forms. The movement originated in Russia in the 1920s and has influenced many aspects of modern architecture and design. |
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Productivism |
Productivism was an art movement founded by a group of Constructivist artists in post-Revolutionary Russia who believed that art should have a practical, socially useful role as a facet of industrial production. The group formed to contradict Naum Gabo's assertion that Constructivism should be devoted to exploration of abstract space and rhythm. |
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Vladimir Yevgraphovich Tatlin |
Vladimir Yevgraphovich Tatlin was a Soviet painter and architect. With Kazimir Malevich he was one of the two most important figures in the Soviet avant-garde art movement of the 1920s, |
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Tatlin’s Monument |
design for a grand monumental building by the Russian artist and architect Vladimir Tatlin, that was never built |
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El Lissitzky |
artist, designer, typographer, photographer and architect who designed many exhibitions and propaganda for the Soviet Union in the early 20th century. His development of the ideas behind the Suprematist art movement were very influential in the development of the Bauhaus and theConstructivist art movements. |
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Supremetism |
the Russian abstract art movement developed by Kazimir Malevich circa 1915, characterized by simple geometric shapes and associated with ideas of spiritual purity. |
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Kazimir Malevich |
Kazimir Malevich was the founder of the artistic and philosophical school of Suprematism, |