Source: Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Kazimir Malevich, Suprematist Painting (with Black Trapezium and Red Square) 1915
The abstract work of artist Kazimir Malevich was quite revolutionary, and manages to look incredibly modern and fresh today – a century on from when it was created.
Source: Krasnodar Territorial Art Museum
Kazimir Malevich, Supremus No. 55 1916
This week, London’s Tate Modern is opening a new retrospective of Malevich’s work, showing his progression from early more traditional paintings of religious scenes and landscapes towards his stunning abstract works, including the Suprematist compositions.
Source: Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Kazimir Malevich (1878 – 1935)An Englishman in Moscow 1914
These heralded Malevich’s invention of the ‘Suprematist’ movement, characterised by stark colours and bold geometric shapes.
Source: © State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
Kazimir Malevich, Black Square 1929
The Tate Modern describes the movement as ‘on a par with Duchamp’s “readymade” as a game-changing moment in twentieth century art’.
The show will also exhibit his designs for the avant-garde opera Victory over the Sun.
Source: The State Russian Museum, St Petersburg
Malevich (1878 – 1935)?Head of a Peasant 1928-29?
‘Malevich’s work tells a fascinating story about the dream of a new social order, the successes and pitfalls of revolutionary ideals, and the power of art itself’, says Tate Modern.
‘This exhibition will, for the first time, offer visitors a chance to trace his ground-breaking developments not only through well-known masterpieces but also through earlier and later work, sculpture, design objects, and rarely-seen prints and drawings.’
Source: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice. Acquisition confirmed in
Kazimir Malevich (1878 – 1935) ?Untitled c.1916?
Malevich’s legacy can be seen in the work of Neville Brody, who in the 1980s based a number of posters on Constructivist principles, and in Richard Meier’s designs for Alessi in the same decade.
Malevich runs from 16 July – 26 October at Tate Modern, Bankside, London SE1 9TG
- Brands in this article