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Varvara Stepanova

Varvara Fyodorovna Stepanova (Russian: Варва́ра Фёдоровна Степа́нова; 4 November [O.S. 23 October] 1894[note 1] – May 20, 1958)[1] was a Russian artist. With her husband Alexander Rodchenko, she was associated with the Constructivist branch of the Russian avant-garde, which rejected aesthetic values in favour of revolutionary ones. Her activities extended into propaganda, poetry, stage scenery and textile designs.

Varvara Stepanova
Varvara Stepanova, 1924
BornNovember 1894
DiedMay 20, 1958(1958-05-20) (aged 63)
NationalityRussian
MovementProductivist art, a branch of Constructivism
SpouseAlexander Rodchenko

Biography edit

 
Stepanova and Rodchenko in their studio, 1920s

Varvara Stepanova who was born in Kaunas (in modern-day Lithuania) came from peasant origins but was able to get an education at Kazan Art School, Kazan. There she met her later husband and collaborator Alexander Rodchenko. In the years before the Russian Revolution of 1917 they leased an apartment in Moscow, owned by Wassily Kandinsky. These artists became some of the main figures in the Russian avant-garde. The new abstract art in Russia which began around 1915[2] was a culmination of influences from Cubism, Italian Futurism and traditional peasant art. She designed Cubo-Futurist work for several artists' books, and studied under Jean Metzinger at Académie de La Palette, an art academy where the painters André Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier also taught.[3]

In the years following the revolution, Stepanova involved herself in poetry, philosophy, painting, graphic art, stage scenery construction, and textile and clothing designs. She contributed work to the Fifth State Exhibition and the Tenth State Exhibition, both in 1919.

In 1920 it came to 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. In 1921, together with Aleksei Gan, Rodchenko and Stepanova formed the first Working Group of Constructivists, which rejected fine art in favor of graphic design, photography, posters, and political propaganda.[4] Also in 1921, Stepanova declared in her text for the exhibition 5x5=25, held in Moscow:

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.

Alexander Rodchenko died on December 3, 1956, and Varvara Stepanova died on May 20, 1958, both in Moscow.[5]

Clothing design and textiles edit

 
Theater director Vitaly Zhemchuzhny, Stepanova and Rodchenko, 1924

In 1921, Stepanova moved almost exclusively into the realm of production, in which she felt her designs could achieve their broadest impact in aiding the development of the Soviet society.[6] Russian Constructivist clothing represented the destabilization of the oppressive, elite aesthetics of the past and, instead, reflected utilitarian functionality and production. Gender and class distinctions gave way to functional, geometric clothing. In line with this objective, Stepanova sought to free the body in her designs, emphasizing clothing's functional rather than decorative qualities. Stepanova deeply believed clothing must be looked at in action. Unlike the aristocratic clothing that she felt sacrificed physical freedom for aesthetics, Stepanova dedicated herself to designing clothing for particular fields and occupational settings in such a way that the object's construction evinced its function. In addition, she sought to develop expedient means of clothing production through simple designs and strategic, economic use of fabrics.[7]

Clothing designs edit

Stepanova, thus, identified clothing as occupying two groups: prodezodezhda and sportodezhda. Within these categories, she attended to logical, efficient production and construction of the garments.[8] However, war-induced poverty placed economic restrictions on the Russian Constructivists’ industrial fervor, and their direct engagement with production was never fully realized. Thus, most of her designs were not mass-produced and circulated.[9]

 
"Prozodezhda" designed by Stepanova in 1920s

The first, prodezodezhda, or production/working clothing in basic styles, included theater costumes as well as professional and industrial garments.[10] In the early 1920s, Stepanova entered the clothing industry through her costume designs in theater, in which she translated her artistic affinity for geometric shapes into functional, emblematic clothing. Made of dark blue and grey material, the graphic costumes allowed actors to maximize the appearance of their movements, exaggerating them for the stage and transforming the body into a dynamic composition of geometric shapes and lines.[11]

Within this category, Stepanova began designing spetsodezhda, or clothing specialized for a specific occupation.[8] In doing so, she designed clothing for men and women in both industrial and professional capacities with meticulous consideration of seaming, pockets, and buttons to ensure each aspect of the costume maintained a functional intention. Regardless of the occupational context, her working clothing carried a distinctive geometric and linear edge, rendering the body into a graphic composition and boxy, androgynous form.[11]

The second category, sportodezhda, or sports costumes, also presented bold lines, large forms, and contrasting colors to enable and emphasize the body's movements and allow spectators to easily distinguish one team from the other. Stepanova even rendered the team's emblem into a graphic design.[11] The sports arena offered a context for Stepanova to realize an idealized bodily neutralization, and her uniforms were often unisex with pants and a belted tunic that obscured the human form.[12]

Textile production edit

Stepanova carried out her ideal of engaging with industrial production in the following year when she, with Lyubov 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). As a constructivist, Stepanova not only transposed bold graphic designs onto her fabrics, but also focused heavily on their production. Stepanova only worked a little over a year at The First Textile Printing Factory, but she designed more than 150 fabric designs in 1924. Although she was inspired to develop new types of fabric, the current technology restricted her to printed patterns on monotone surfaces. By her own artistic choice, she also limited her color palette to one or two dyes. Although she only used triangles, circles, squares, and lines, Stepanova superimposed these geometric forms onto one another to create a dynamic, multi-dimensional design.[13]

Graphic design edit

Stepanova practiced typography, book design and contributed to the magazine LEF throughout the early 1920s.[14] As part of a government campaign to promote universal literacy, Stepanova organized a "Book Evening" in 1924.[14] This was a performance that featured characters from pre- and post-revolutionary literature battling each other.[14]

Tribute edit

On October 22, 2018,[note 1] Stepanova was honoured with a Google Doodle posthumously on her 124th birthday.[15]

See also edit

References and sources edit

Notes
  1. ^ a b Sources differ regarding the date of birth, in which they wrote either 3, 4 or 9 November based on the Gregorian calendar.
References
  1. ^ . Archived from the original on November 21, 2008. Retrieved October 6, 2008.
  2. ^ "The Collection | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art.
  3. ^ Examiner, Constructivism & early avant-garde Russian fashion design, November 3, 2009
  4. ^ Jones, Yvonne. "Rodchenko, Alexander". The Oxford Companion to Western Art - Oxford Art Online. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
  5. ^ Jeong, Da Hyung. "Varvara Stepanova, Russian, 1894–1958". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
  6. ^ Lavrentiev, Alexander (2000). John E. Bowlt and Matthew Drutt (ed.). Amazons of the avant-garde : Alexandra Exter, Natalia Goncharova, Liubov Popova, Olga Rozanova, Varvara Stepanova, and Nadezhda Udaltsova. New York: Guggenheim Museum. p. 241. ISBN 0810969246.
  7. ^ Lodder, Christina (1985). Russian constructivism (4. print. ed.). New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press. p. 148. ISBN 0300034067.
  8. ^ a b Adaskina, Natalia (1987). "Constructivist Fabrics and Dress Design". The Journal of Propaganda Arts. 5: 149.
  9. ^ Lodder, Christina (1985). Russian constructivism (4. print. ed.). New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press. p. 145. ISBN 0300034067.
  10. ^ Lodder, Christina (1985). Russian constructivism (4. print. ed.). New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300034067.
  11. ^ a b c Lavrentiev, Alexander (1988). John E. Bowlt (ed.). Varvara Stepanova, the complete work (1st MIT Press ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 79. ISBN 0262620820.
  12. ^ Kiaer, Christina (2008). Imagine no possessions : the socialist objects of Russian constructivism. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT. p. 114. ISBN 978-0262612210.
  13. ^ Lavrentiev, Alexander (1988). John E. Bowlt (ed.). Varvara Stepanova, the complete work (1st MIT Press ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 80. ISBN 0262620820.
  14. ^ a b c Yablonskaya, M. N. (1990). Parton, Anthony (ed.). Women Artists of Russias New Age: 1900-1935. New York: Rizzoli. pp. 153–154.
  15. ^ "Varvara Stepanova's 124th Birthday". October 22, 2018. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
Sources
  • The Russian Experiment in Art, Camilla Gray, Thames and Hudson,1976
  • Avant-garde Russe, Andrei Nakov, Art Data, 1986
  • Russian Constructivism, Christina Lodder, Yale University Press, 1985
  • Varvara Stepanova, The Complete Works, Alexander Lavrentiev, MIT Press, 1988

External links edit

  Media related to Varvara Stepanova at Wikimedia Commons

  • Art engineers: Rodchenko and Stepanova (in Russian) – biographical article

varvara, stepanova, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, fyodorovna, family, name, stepanova, varvara, fyodorovna, stepanova, russian, Варва, ра, Фёдоровна, Степа, нова, november, october, 1894, note, 1958, russian, artist, . In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Fyodorovna and the family name is Stepanova Varvara Fyodorovna Stepanova Russian Varva ra Fyodorovna Stepa nova 4 November O S 23 October 1894 note 1 May 20 1958 1 was a Russian artist With her husband Alexander Rodchenko she was associated with the Constructivist branch of the Russian avant garde which rejected aesthetic values in favour of revolutionary ones Her activities extended into propaganda poetry stage scenery and textile designs Varvara StepanovaVarvara Stepanova 1924BornNovember 1894Kovno Russian EmpireDiedMay 20 1958 1958 05 20 aged 63 Moscow Russian SFSRNationalityRussianMovementProductivist art a branch of ConstructivismSpouseAlexander Rodchenko Contents 1 Biography 2 Clothing design and textiles 2 1 Clothing designs 2 2 Textile production 3 Graphic design 4 Tribute 5 See also 6 References and sources 7 External linksBiography edit nbsp Stepanova and Rodchenko in their studio 1920s Varvara Stepanova who was born in Kaunas in modern day Lithuania came from peasant origins but was able to get an education at Kazan Art School Kazan There she met her later husband and collaborator Alexander Rodchenko In the years before the Russian Revolution of 1917 they leased an apartment in Moscow owned by Wassily Kandinsky These artists became some of the main figures in the Russian avant garde The new abstract art in Russia which began around 1915 2 was a culmination of influences from Cubism Italian Futurism and traditional peasant art She designed Cubo Futurist work for several artists books and studied under Jean Metzinger at Academie de La Palette an art academy where the painters Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier also taught 3 In the years following the revolution Stepanova involved herself in poetry philosophy painting graphic art stage scenery construction and textile and clothing designs She contributed work to the Fifth State Exhibition and the Tenth State Exhibition both in 1919 In 1920 it came to 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 In 1921 together with Aleksei Gan Rodchenko and Stepanova formed the first Working Group of Constructivists which rejected fine art in favor of graphic design photography posters and political propaganda 4 Also in 1921 Stepanova declared in her text for the exhibition 5x5 25 held in Moscow 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 Alexander Rodchenko died on December 3 1956 and Varvara Stepanova died on May 20 1958 both in Moscow 5 Clothing design and textiles edit nbsp Theater director Vitaly Zhemchuzhny Stepanova and Rodchenko 1924 In 1921 Stepanova moved almost exclusively into the realm of production in which she felt her designs could achieve their broadest impact in aiding the development of the Soviet society 6 Russian Constructivist clothing represented the destabilization of the oppressive elite aesthetics of the past and instead reflected utilitarian functionality and production Gender and class distinctions gave way to functional geometric clothing In line with this objective Stepanova sought to free the body in her designs emphasizing clothing s functional rather than decorative qualities Stepanova deeply believed clothing must be looked at in action Unlike the aristocratic clothing that she felt sacrificed physical freedom for aesthetics Stepanova dedicated herself to designing clothing for particular fields and occupational settings in such a way that the object s construction evinced its function In addition she sought to develop expedient means of clothing production through simple designs and strategic economic use of fabrics 7 Clothing designs edit Stepanova thus identified clothing as occupying two groups prodezodezhda and sportodezhda Within these categories she attended to logical efficient production and construction of the garments 8 However war induced poverty placed economic restrictions on the Russian Constructivists industrial fervor and their direct engagement with production was never fully realized Thus most of her designs were not mass produced and circulated 9 nbsp Prozodezhda designed by Stepanova in 1920s The first prodezodezhda or production working clothing in basic styles included theater costumes as well as professional and industrial garments 10 In the early 1920s Stepanova entered the clothing industry through her costume designs in theater in which she translated her artistic affinity for geometric shapes into functional emblematic clothing Made of dark blue and grey material the graphic costumes allowed actors to maximize the appearance of their movements exaggerating them for the stage and transforming the body into a dynamic composition of geometric shapes and lines 11 Within this category Stepanova began designing spetsodezhda or clothing specialized for a specific occupation 8 In doing so she designed clothing for men and women in both industrial and professional capacities with meticulous consideration of seaming pockets and buttons to ensure each aspect of the costume maintained a functional intention Regardless of the occupational context her working clothing carried a distinctive geometric and linear edge rendering the body into a graphic composition and boxy androgynous form 11 The second category sportodezhda or sports costumes also presented bold lines large forms and contrasting colors to enable and emphasize the body s movements and allow spectators to easily distinguish one team from the other Stepanova even rendered the team s emblem into a graphic design 11 The sports arena offered a context for Stepanova to realize an idealized bodily neutralization and her uniforms were often unisex with pants and a belted tunic that obscured the human form 12 Textile production edit Stepanova carried out her ideal of engaging with industrial production in the following year when she with Lyubov 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 As a constructivist Stepanova not only transposed bold graphic designs onto her fabrics but also focused heavily on their production Stepanova only worked a little over a year at The First Textile Printing Factory but she designed more than 150 fabric designs in 1924 Although she was inspired to develop new types of fabric the current technology restricted her to printed patterns on monotone surfaces By her own artistic choice she also limited her color palette to one or two dyes Although she only used triangles circles squares and lines Stepanova superimposed these geometric forms onto one another to create a dynamic multi dimensional design 13 Graphic design editStepanova practiced typography book design and contributed to the magazine LEF throughout the early 1920s 14 As part of a government campaign to promote universal literacy Stepanova organized a Book Evening in 1924 14 This was a performance that featured characters from pre and post revolutionary literature battling each other 14 Tribute editOn October 22 2018 note 1 Stepanova was honoured with a Google Doodle posthumously on her 124th birthday 15 See also editAnti art Note it is disputed whether or not artwork associated with Varvara Stepanova is indeed anti art Soviet fashion designReferences and sources editNotes a b Sources differ regarding the date of birth in which they wrote either 3 4 or 9 November based on the Gregorian calendar References Varvara Stepanova Archived from the original on November 21 2008 Retrieved October 6 2008 The Collection MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Examiner Constructivism amp early avant garde Russian fashion design November 3 2009 Jones Yvonne Rodchenko Alexander The Oxford Companion to Western Art Oxford Art Online Retrieved 10 May 2013 Jeong Da Hyung Varvara Stepanova Russian 1894 1958 Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2023 05 02 Lavrentiev Alexander 2000 John E Bowlt and Matthew Drutt ed Amazons of the avant garde Alexandra Exter Natalia Goncharova Liubov Popova Olga Rozanova Varvara Stepanova and Nadezhda Udaltsova New York Guggenheim Museum p 241 ISBN 0810969246 Lodder Christina 1985 Russian constructivism 4 print ed New Haven Conn Yale University Press p 148 ISBN 0300034067 a b Adaskina Natalia 1987 Constructivist Fabrics and Dress Design The Journal of Propaganda Arts 5 149 Lodder Christina 1985 Russian constructivism 4 print ed New Haven Conn Yale University Press p 145 ISBN 0300034067 Lodder Christina 1985 Russian constructivism 4 print ed New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 0300034067 a b c Lavrentiev Alexander 1988 John E Bowlt ed Varvara Stepanova the complete work 1st MIT Press ed Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press p 79 ISBN 0262620820 Kiaer Christina 2008 Imagine no possessions the socialist objects of Russian constructivism Cambridge Massachusetts MIT p 114 ISBN 978 0262612210 Lavrentiev Alexander 1988 John E Bowlt ed Varvara Stepanova the complete work 1st MIT Press ed Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press p 80 ISBN 0262620820 a b c Yablonskaya M N 1990 Parton Anthony ed Women Artists of Russias New Age 1900 1935 New York Rizzoli pp 153 154 Varvara Stepanova s 124th Birthday October 22 2018 Retrieved October 28 2018 Sources The Russian Experiment in Art Camilla Gray Thames and Hudson 1976 Avant garde Russe Andrei Nakov Art Data 1986 Russian Constructivism Christina Lodder Yale University Press 1985 Varvara Stepanova The Complete Works Alexander Lavrentiev MIT Press 1988External links edit nbsp Media related to Varvara Stepanova at Wikimedia Commons Art engineers Rodchenko and Stepanova in Russian biographical article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Varvara Stepanova amp oldid 1204319019, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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