Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Pavel Kuznetsov

Pavel Kuznetsov

Pavel Kuznetsov

His Life and Art
Peter Stupples, University of Otago, New Zealand
February 1990
Unavailable - out of print December 2004
Hardback
9780521364881
Out of Print
Hardback

    Pavel Kuznetsov (1878–1968), the leading figure in the development of intuitivism, made a considerable impact on the Russian art world 1907–14 and had a profound influence on his colleagues well into the 1930s and in the years following Stalin's death. There are few of his paintings in the West and so he is comparatively (and undeservedly) unknown, unlike Malevich and Kandinsky who are well represented in Western collections. Kuznetsov lived in the last years of the Russian Empire, through the revolutions of 1917, the turbulent 1920s, the Stalin era and into the Brezhnev years. Thus as a politically committed painter his story in particular highlights the prevailing difficulties for a lyrical intuitivist artist during the post-revolutionary period. This study will make Kuznetsov's work more familiar to Western art historians and collectors, and should also engage the interest of readers more generally interested in Russia and the Soviet Union.

    Product details

    February 1990
    Hardback
    9780521364881
    390 pages
    246 × 189 × 34 mm
    1.312kg
    Unavailable - out of print December 2004

    Table of Contents

    • List of illustrations
    • Preface
    • A note on spelling and transliteration
    • 1. Saratov childhood
    • 2. The Moscow College
    • 3. The Church of the Virgin of Kazan
    • 4. The scarlet rose
    • 5. A symphony of birth and maternal love
    • 6. The paris with Diaghilev
    • 7. The blue rose
    • 8. Kuchuk-Koi
    • 9. Kirghizia discovered
    • 10. Bukhara
    • 11. Les fauves
    • 12. In sober earnest
    • 13. Sakuntala
    • 14. Acting in the living present
    • 15. Finding the way:
    • 1919–23
    • 16. Paris and Venice:
    • 1923–4
    • 17. The Four Arts Society
    • 18. Armenia and Baku: the search for relevance
    • 19. Ground in the mill of socialist realism
    • 20. The dark years:
    • 1941–56
    • 21. Rehabilitation: the beginning and the end
    • 22. Rehabilitation: the legacy
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Peter Stupples , University of Otago, New Zealand