Nikolai Vladimirovich Sinesubov

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Nikolai Wladimirowitsch Sinesubow ( Russian: Николай Владимирович Синезубов ; * 1891 in Moscow , † 1956 in Paris ) was an artist of the Russian avant-garde who made contributions to the style of New Objectivity in art.

life and work

Sinesubov studied from 1912 to 1917 at the Moscow University of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.

In 1919 he was commissioned to design the front page of the Russian magazine for proletarian culture Création , which was published for the press ministry.

In 1920 he took part in the exhibition of the four in Moscow, together with Kandinsky , Rodschenko and Varvara Stepanova .

He spent the years 1922 and 1923 in Berlin. The First Russian Art Exhibition in Berlin in 1922 showed his paintings Pensa , Hairdresser and Toilet, as well as the picture Customs officer and Pharisee and woman as a copper print.

In 1927 he had a solo exhibition at the State Academy of Art Studies ( GAChN ).

After 1928 he emigrated to France, where he retained his stylistic affinity for the tendencies of New Objectivity and Magical Realism .

Works (selection)

  • around 1925 Composition , oil on canvas, 64.5 × 81 cm, Galerie Gmurzynska, Cologne - 1985 Collection Ludwig, Cologne, ML1400, Neg. 195572

Individual evidence

  1. Синезубов Николай Васильевич. In: artrz.ru. Искусство и архитектура русского зарубежья, March 30, 2012, accessed July 12, 2019 (Russian).

literature

  • Book for the exhibition 16. Russian Avantgarde 1910–1930 Collection Ludwig, Cologne , in the Kunsthalle Cologne, April 16–11. May 1986 (edited and with an introduction by Evelyn Weiss )

Web links