Details
Type
Access level
Available on request
Institution
Location
Moscow, Garage Archive Collection
Publication date
Place of publication
Cologne
Publishers
Keywords
Description
Dabbling in fauvism and cubism before founding the Suprematist movement, Russian painter and sculptor Kasimir Malevich (1879–1935) was a leading figure of the avant-garde and a pioneer of the non-objective style that he felt would “free viewers from the material world.” In 1915, the same year he produced his most famous painting, “Black Square,” he published the manifesto From Cubism to Suprematism. To critics who accused his work of being devoid of beauty and nature, he responded “art does not need us, and it never did.”
Related persons
- / Author
- / Mentioned