El Lissitzky (1890 – 1941) was born Lazar Markovich Lisitskii in 1890 in
Pochinok, in the Russian province of Smolensk, and grew up in Vitebsk.
He pursued architectural studies at the Technische Hochschule in
Darmstadt, Germany, from 1909 to 1914, when the outbreak of World War 1
precipitated his return to Russia. In 1916, he received a diploma in
engineering and architecture from the Riga Technological University.
Lissitzky and Kazimir Malevich were invited by Marc Chagall to join the
faculty of the Vitebsk Popular Art School in 1919; there Lissitzky
taught architecture and graphics. That same year, he executed his first
Proun (an acronym in Russian for “project for the affirmation of the
new”) and formed part of the Unovis group. In 1920, he became a member
of Inkhuk (Institute for Artistic Culture) in Moscow and designed his
book Pro dva kvadrata. The following year, he taught at Vkhutemas with
Vladimir Tatlin and joined the Constructivist group. The Constructivists
exhibited at the Erste russische Kunstausstellung designed by
Lissitzky at the Galerie van Diemen in Berlin in 1922. During this
period he collaborated with Ilya Ehrenburg on the journal
Veshch/Gegenstand/Objet.
In 1923, the artist experimented with
new typographic design for a book by Vladimir Mayakovski, Dlya golosa,
and visited Hannover, where his work was shown under the auspices of
the Kestner-Gesellschaft. Also in 1923, Lissitzky created his Proun
environment for the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung and executed his
lithographic suites Proun and Victory over the Sun (illustrating the
opera by Alexei Kruchenykh and Mikhail Matiushin), before traveling to
Switzerland for medical treatment. In 1924, he worked with Kurt
Schwitters on the issue of the periodical Merz called “Nasci,” and with
Arp on the book Die Kunstismen. The next year, he returned to Moscow
to teach at Vkhutemas-Vkhutein, which he continued to do until 1930.
During the mid-1920s, Lissitzky stopped painting in order to
concentrate on the design of typography and exhibitions. He created a
room for the Internationale Kunstausstellung in Dresden in 1926 and
another at the Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum Hannover in 1927. He died
in 1941 in Moscow.
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'For the voice' by Vladimir Mayakovsky |
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'For the voice' by Vladimir Mayakovsky |
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1919 Proun 1 C oil on panel 68 x 68 cm |
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1920 Beat All the Scattered |
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1920 Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge |
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1920 Book cover for 'Suprematic tale about two squares' |
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1920 Cover to 'For the voice' by Vladimir Mayakovsky |
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1920 Do not read, grab bars, paper, pieces of wood, fold, paint, build |
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1920 Lenin Tribune |
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1920 Preliminary sketch for a poster |
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c1920 Proun 4 B. oil on canvas 70 x 56 cmjpg |
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c1920 Untitled oil on canvas 80 x 50 cm |
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1922 Cover of the avant guard periodical 'Vyeshch' |
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1922 Proun 19 D |
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1922 Proun |
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1923 1o Kestnermappe Proun lithograph 60 x 44 cm |
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1923 Globetrotter (in Time) from 'Victory Over the Sun' portfolio lithograph 51 x 43 cm |
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1923 Gravediggers from 'Victory Over the Sun' portfolio lithograph 51 x 43.1 cm |
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1923 New Man |
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1923 Old Man (Head 2 Steps behind) from 'Victory Over the Son' portfolio lithograph 51 x 43 cm |
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1923 Proun 2 |
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1923 Proun G 7 tempera & varnish on canvas 77 x 62 cm |
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1923 Proun poster |
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1923 Sentry from 'Victory Over the Sun' portfolio lithograph 53.3 x 45.7 cm |
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1924 Proun 99 129 x 99 cm |
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1925 Proun N 89 collage, tempera 50 x 65 cm |
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1928 Basic Calculus |
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Proun 30 |
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Proun 43 |
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