Item #4049 Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger. Larisa Peshekhonova Elena Gagarina, preface.
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger
Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger

Suprematicheskoe predvidenie v ukrasheniiakh i grafike Nadi Lezhe / Suprematism Vision: Space Motifs in the Graphic Works and Jewellery designs of Nadia Léger

Moscow: Muzei Moskovskogo Kremlia, 2021. Sewn pb. Nadia Léger-Khodossevitch studied with Malevich in the 1920s. After emigration to France she practiced various genres and styles but in the 1970s inspired by the first manned space programs she returned to suprematist forms which, as she interpreted Malevich, express mankind's striving to go beyond the bounds of earth. In the 1976 she donated to her homeland thirty-seven works of applied art (mainly jewelry) which embody this theme. The works became part of the collections of the Kremlin Museums and are the subject of this exhibition catalogue. Also published are drawings and lithographs that demonstrate how she conceived the works. 92 p., 28 cm, approx. 80 color illus. Rus. with title page captions, and summary in ENGLISH. Item #4049
ISBN: 9785886783834

Price: $46.00

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