Naum Gabo Essays

  • Vladimir Tatlin and Naum Gabo Modern Art

    795 Words  | 2 Pages

    This paper will explore Vladimir Tatlin and Naum Gabo differences on the role of the Avant-Garde artists and how their beliefs influence the kind of work they produced. A pioneer of Russian design Vladimir Tatlin is a representative of Russian Realism. He left home when he was fifteen and served on the shipboard. When he became a painter, he often represented sailors in his pictures Art and culture in Russia after Revolution was a tool for creating industrially aesthetical reality. Tatlin’s project

  • Non-Objective Art and Spirituality

    685 Words  | 2 Pages

    The following paper will look at non-objective art and at how Kazimir Malevich and Piet Mondrian viewed the relationship between this type of art and spirituality. Specifically, while it is evident that both men saw the important ways in which intellectual and cognitive transcendence could be achieved through non-objective art, Malevich seems the more explicit of the two men when it comes to linking non-objective artwork with western, organized religion; for his part, Mondrian favors a more diffuse

  • Difference Between Constructivism And Cold War Constructivism

    704 Words  | 2 Pages

    material for décor not utilitarian purpose. Cold War Constructivism occurred during the Cold War between US and Soviet Union. Cold War Constructivism was the American ideology of Constructivism in response to Gabo’s work and statements about his work. Gabo was a Soviet artist who aimed to be known as the father of Constructivism, and took politics out of the work to be accepted in the western world. Barr’s accepted Socialist Realism as the

  • Kasimir Malevich

    744 Words  | 2 Pages

    Kasimir Malevich Kasimir Malevich, a Russian painter and designer, was born near Kiev on February 26, 1878 (Guggeheimcollection.org) and was “one of six children from Russified Poles” (Articons.co.uk). While living in Ukraine, he became absorbed into art during his teens, “largely teaching himself” the basics (Articons.co.uk). After saving his money “from his job as a railroad clerk” (Articons.co.uk), Malevich enrolled in the Moscow Institute of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture in 1903

  • Cubism And Modern Architecture

    1510 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cubism was most notably founded by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in Paris, France and also other Eastern European countries from 1907-1914. Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque where the pioneers of early cubism art movement which led to new art and architecture introduced to the world. Josef Chocol was an architect who implied cubism forms and function into his building. Cubism was predominantly located in Paris France during the early 20th century. The cubism movement was a revolutionary new approach