Nearly forgotten but glorious art, envisionings and historical oddments from the back corners of the internet
Avant-garde art in colors that dazzle the mind. Russian. Olga Rozanova, artist (1886-1918). All of these works having been published in “The Great utopia: the Russian and Soviet avant-garde, 1915-1932” in 1992, which has just been made available in digitalized form by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library.
“Non Objective Composition (Flight of an Airplane).” 1915. Oil on canvas. Collection of the State Museum, Samara. Published in 1992 in “The Great utopia: the Russian and Soviet avant-garde, 1915-1932.” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library contributor. Fair use license. via https://archive.org/details/grerussi00schi/page/n114“Room.” 1915. Collection of the State Lunacharsky Museum of Fine Arts, Krasnodar. Published in 1992 in “The Great utopia: the Russian and Soviet avant-garde, 1915-1932.” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library contributor. Fair use license. via https://archive.org/details/grerussi00schi/page/n114“Non-Objective Composition.” 1916. Museum of Fine Arts, Ekaterinburg. Published in 1992 in “The Great utopia: the Russian and Soviet avant-garde, 1915-1932.” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library contributor. Fair use license. via https://archive.org/details/grerussi00schi/page/n115“Non-Objective Composition.” 1917. Collection of the State Art Museum, Ulianovsk. Published in 1992 in “The Great utopia: the Russian and Soviet avant-garde, 1915-1932.” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library contributor. Fair use license. via https://archive.org/details/grerussi00schi/page/n119
On a voyage to see how much mileage I can get from the creative ability and eye for images that my family thought was useless. On line art curator, fiction writer and now blogger. Historian's daughter. Follow me . . .even I have no idea where I'm going next.
View all posts by sarahbguestperry