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[EXCLUSIVE] Revolution: Russian Art 1917-1932, the Keys On How A Nation Was Changed

By Ralphy Bonn Sim on Feb 15, 2017 01:57 AM EST

The presence of the Royal Academy's enormous Revolution: Russian Art 1917-1932 stand for Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky after the death of Vladimir Lenin. Six years after the mourning; the people of USSR revived a life-size portrait of intellectual power.

Vladimir Lenin came from a bronze colossus, and turn into a china figurine; after his death, he's just a memory that attached into people's daily things. His successor of the power was followed by Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin.

From 1917 to 1932 was the Revolution: Russian Art, it brought all of the arts from that period that made the Revolution such a momentous, according to Royal Academy UK. Including the socialist realist utopias, films of peasants and hymns to mechanization; it was the first time that the world has seen the art of Revolution as a whole.

 During the Bolsheviks also known as the majority took the power in October 1917, no social group was more caught up in the revolutionary spirit than artist, writers, and composers. They all believed that art could have a purpose beyond itself and has the power to reboot an entire nation; and that's the beginning of Revolution: Russian Art.

Anything was possible at the time of Revolution: Russian Art, art is everywhere in a new world where everything can change through art. Ivan Puni's beautiful "Spectrum: Flight of Forms" sends Cyrillic letters up to the moonlight. As stated by the reports of The Guardian, Alexei Shchusev's mausoleum for Lenin was a hybrid of the pyramid, a supremacist geometry, and Cunard liner. Along with Konstantin Yuon's imagines the whole planet shooting up the picture plane.

It was astonishing to feel how fast new ideas were made Europe even before 1917. Picasso's works of cubism were adapted in Moscow by Kazimir Malevich. Bolshevik leaders such as Boris Grigoriev and Aristarkh Lentulov adored Cezanne painting Mont Sainte-Victoire. Futurist and impressionist pf wild experiments in space and viewpoints in terms of films and photography; all of this, there is a great Revolution: Russian Art.

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TagsRevolution: Russian Art, Revolution: Russian Art 1917-1932, Joseph Stalin, Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky

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