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Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov, The Feast of Kings. 1913.
Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov, The Feast of Kings. 1913.
Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov, The Feast of Kings. 1913.
Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov, The Feast of Kings. 1913.
The Feast of Kings. 1913. Oil on canvas, 175x215 cm. The Russian Museum, St.Petersburg.
         
  Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov  
       

. Founder of the “School of Analitic Art”, Filonov rightly belongs to the circle of the reformers of the world art.

 

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Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov (1883-1941) was one of few defining artists of the XX century and rightfully belongs among such artists as Picasso, Kandinsky, Dali, Klee and others, as a reformer of world art.

 

  Filonov has established the group MAI - Masters of Analytical Art. It was the school of Filonov's pupils and followers. According to his will, almost all of his paintings and graphic works were transferred to the State Russian Museum.
 
Bio
     Pavel Filonov was born in Moscow. Early orphaned, he moved to St. Petersburg where he took art lessons. From 1908 to 1910 he attended the Academy of Arts, but was expelled in 1910. In 1911 he came in contact with the Union of Youth and contributed to its exhibitions. Next year travelled to Italy and France. In 1913 designed the stage set for Vladimir Maiakovskii's tragedy Vladimir Maiakovskii.
     Over the next two years he worked as an illustrator of futurist booklets, published his transrational poem The Chant of Universal Flowering (Propoved' o porosli mirovoi), and started developing his artistic theories, the so-called Ideology of Analytical Art and the Principle of Madeness (see extracts below). In 1919 exhibited at the First State Free Exhibition of Works of Art in Petrograd. In 1923 he became a professor at the Academy of Arts and an associate of the Institute of Artistic Culture (Inkhuk). In the same year he published the "Declaration of Universal Flowering" in the journal Zhizn' Iskusstva. Two years later, Filonov established the Collective of Masters of Analytical Art (known today as Filonov School). Because of continuing attacks and ostracism, Filonov's exhibition planned for 1929-30 at the Russian Museum did not open. In 1932 he contributed to the exhibition Artists of the RSFSR over the last 15 years.
     His life and creativity was cut short by the war. He died of pneumonia during the siege of Leningrad in 1941. In 1967 he had a posthumous exhibition in Novosibirsk. Only in recent years Filonov's art received international recognition. The images produced by his mind contributed significantly to the intellectual growth of avant-garde in Russia. His artistic character was founded upon some uncompromising ideals to which he was committed, as he demonstrated in the early years of his work by not accepting the ideology of the Academy of Art in St.Petersburg.
 
Filonov left the Academy in 1910 and chose to ignore the mainstream current of art to further develop his personal style. Through his art, Pavel Filonov sought to observe and understand the forces that comprise the human existence, both the internal and external factors.He aimed to achieve a systematic knowledge of the world and it's human inhabitants. Filonov's paintings were in effect not mere images with meaning; -- his work went beyond that -- they were manifestations of intellectual concepts, something derived from his theory and ideology. The viewer of the art was to observe a "projective intellect" within the imagery. "A picture suggests to the mind of its viewer a single conclusion, which cannot be translated into words."
     After the 1917 revolution, Filonov worked to complete the development of his "analytical painting". The changes in the Russian society brought inspiration to the Futurist artists. Filonov dedicated much of his time and effort to artistic research and creativity, working on his paintings as much as 18 hours a day. In 1925, having found many followers and supporters for his style of expression, he founded a school in Petrograd, which was shut down by the government in 1928, together with all other private artistic and cultural organizations. In "Ideology of Analytical Art" Filonov explains what he expects from his student artists (and, of course, from himself): A work of art is any piece of work made with the maximum tension of "analytical madeness" - "sdelannost". The word is Filonov's neologism, derived from the Russian verb "sdelat'," - to make, to do. Used in its perfective form, the verb denotes the completion of action. The only professional criterion for evaluating a piece of work is its madeness. In their profession the artist and his disciple must love all that is "made well" and hate all that is "not made." In analytical thought the process of study becomes an integral part of the creative process for the piece being made. The more consciously and forcefully the artist works on his intellect, the stronger the effect the finished work has on the spectator. Each brushstroke, each contact with the picture, is a precise recording through the material and in the material of the inner psychical process taking place in the artist, and the whole work is the entire recording of the intellect of the person who made it. Art is the reflection through material or the record in material of the struggle for the formation of man's higher intellectual condition. Art's efficacity vis-a-vis the spectator is equal to this; i.e., it both makes him superior and summons him to become superior.
   
Pavel Nikolaevich Filonov , Peasant Family, oil/canvas, 89?72cm, 1915 Peasant Family, oil/canvas, 89Χ72cm, 1915  

 

The artist-proletarian's obligation is not only to create works that answer the demands of today, but also to open the way to intellect into the distant future. The artist-proletarian must act on the intellect of his comrade proletarians not only through what they canunderstand at their present stage of development. Work on content is work on form and vice versa. The more forcefully the form is expressed, the more forcefully the content is expressed. Form is made by persistent line. Every line must be made. Every atom must be made; the whole work must be made and adapted. Think persistently and accurately over every atom of the work you are doing. Make every atom persistently and accurately. Introduce persistently and accurately into every atom the color you have studied -- so that it enters the atom just as heat enters the body or so that it is linked organically with the form, just as in nature a flower's cellulose is linked with its color. Painting is the colored conclusion of drawing.

Sources: Bowlt, John E. Russian Art of the Avant-Garde: Theory and Criticism. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1988
 

 
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MAI - Masters of Analytical Art. Association of P.N.Filonov's followers.The association was established in 1925 and was existed officially up to 1932, besides meetings in Filonov's workshop proceeded up to his death in 1941 in Blockade Leningrad. Complement of participants was varying during years. Total number of participants was approximately 70 persons. Here are some significant names of this union:

Glebova Tatyana Nikolaevna, Mikhail Tsybasov, Sulimo-Samuillo Vsevolod Angelovich, Alisa Poret
 

 
 
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