pavel tchelitchew
Transcription
pavel tchelitchew
Alexander Kuznetsov PAVEL TCHELITCHEW Metamorphoses 336 pages, 23 x 29 cm, 370 illustrations Hardback with dust jacket, decorative slip-case Text in English | Summaries in German | Russian | French € 68 [D] | US$ 95 | £ 55 ISBN 978-3-89790-368-5 Dissolution of the Shell Pavel Tchelitchew (1898–1957) is one of the most fascinating artist personalities of the modern era due to his comprehensive and complex oeuvre. After schooling in Moscow and Kiev with Alexandra Exter, he successfully worked as a stage designer in Berlin at the beginning of the 1920s, before moving to Paris in 1923. At the time, Gertrude Stein and later Edith Sitwell were among Tchelitchew’s illustrious patrons. In Paris Tchelitchew was engaged with the same motifs as many of his contemporaries: flowers, fruit, human models, circus acrobats. He moved in the circles of the so-called neo-Romantics and was therefore not only shaped by Surrealism but also by the turn-of-the-century Russian Symbolism, which he enhanced with his individually interpreted Cubist elements. From 1936 to 1938, now in New York, his first chief work Phenomena emerged, a Surrealist landscape tableau with over a hundred overdrawn figures, viewed from different perspectives – portraits of people who in some way or another were connected to Tchelitchew’s life. In his works of the late 1930s plant motifs with representations of children began to meld and flow into Tchelitchew’s Have you seen our online press portal? There you will find the covers, images and press releases of our new publications available to download. You can also leaf through our books on our website. We look forward to your visit. www.arnoldsche.com/en/Press probably most famous work, Hide and Seek (1940–42). Afterwards he dedicated himself to ‘inner landscapes’ – ‘Xrays’ of heads and bodies, permeated with glowing veins, arteries and pathways of nerves. In the 1950s Tchelitchew ultimately dissolved the human body into luminescent paths of energy, which became ‘vibrant’, interpenetrating geometric masses (‘dancing boxes’) in his final period of creativity. Tchelitchew constantly experimented with new styles in his search for a language of form for his philosophic concepts and a transcendental, cosmic order. The emerging comprehensive range of studies, drawings and paint-ings represents an outstanding contribution to art of the modern era. It is appreciated in its entirety for the first time in this publication. This groundbreaking monograph of the American painter of Russian extraction Pavel Tchelitchew presents a comprehensive sample of his most significant paintings in countless large-format illustrations over a total of 336 pages. Enhanced by a selection of drawings, stage sets and costumes, the exciting oeuvre of this exceptionally individual artist can be experienced for the first time in its complete complexity and multiplicity. For more information or free review copies, please do not hesitate to contact us: Winfried Stürzl [email protected] ARNOLDSCHE Art Publishers Liststraße 9, D–70180 Stuttgart Fon +49 (0)711 64 56 18–14 | Fax –79 www.arnoldsche.com | page 1 PRESS RELEASE | PAVEL TCHELITCHEW A groundbreaking monograph of the painter Pavel Tchelitchew Artist Inhalt Pavel Tchelitchew is represented in numerous public and private collection, including 6 Pavel Tchelitchew – Metamorphoses 57 Pavel Tchelitchew – Oeuvre 282 Catalogue of illustrated works 304 307 310 Russian Summary French Summary German Summary 314 319 319 320 321 324 335 Pavel Tchelitchew: A Brief Biography Museum and Public Collections Selected Solo Exhibitions Selected Group Exhibitions Selected Bibliography Thirty Significant Publications on Pavel Tchelitchew Acknowledgements - - - - Museum of Modern Art, New York Tate collection, London Musée national d’art moderne, Paris The State Tretyakow Gallery, Moskow Author Alexander Evengenyevich Kuznetsov was born in 1965 in Kazan in the former Soviet Union (today the Russian Federation). In 2000 he graduated in art history at the Russian Academy of Arts (Ilya Repin Institute) in St Petersburg. The author of numerous articles on Russian art history of the late nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century has worked together with galleries in St Petersburg and Moscow since the late 1990s. Since 2006 he has been particularly inter-ested in the Parisian neo-Romantics Christian Bérard, Eugène Berman und Pavel Tchelitchew. In 2006 and 2011 Kuznetsov curated two major retrospectives on the artistic and graphic work of Pavel Tchelitchew in the Kournikova Gallery in Moscow. He continues this work in the form of a catalogue raisonné on Tchelitchew. Kuznetsov is currently working on a monograph on Nikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. Since April 2005 he has worked as an expert in painting and drawing for MacDougall’s Fine Art Auctions in London. Press Images Please download the images from www.arnoldsche.com/en/Press/New-books 033 Pavel Tchelitchew Acrobat, 1927 Oil, coffee and sand on canvas, 91,5 x 73 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg Please note: Press images are only released for use in book reviews. Please name (where specified) the respective photographer/copyright holder and refrain from cropping the images. Thank you! www.arnoldsche.com | page 2 Press RELEASE | PAVEL TCHELITCHEW Press Material Press Images Please download the images from www.arnoldsche.com/en/Press/New-books 043 Pavel Tchelitchew Young Boy with a White Collar, 1927 Oil on canvas, 92,5 x 61 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg 152 Pavel Tchelitchew Girl with Butterflies, 1934 Oil on canvas, 92 x 65 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg 181 Pavel Tchelitchew Blindfolded Girl, 1939 Gouache on paper, 65 x 50,5 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg Please note: Press images are only released for use in book reviews. Please name (where specified) the respective photographer/copyright holder and refrain from cropping the images. Thank you! www.arnoldsche.com | page 3 Press RELEASE | PAVEL TCHELITCHEW 134 Pavel Tchelitchew Anemones, 1932 Oil on canvas, 74,5 x 50 cm Private Collection, London Courtesy of Sotheby‘s, New York Press Images Please download the images from www.arnoldsche.com/en/Press/New-books 194 Pavel Tchelitchew Leaf Children (study for the cover of Town & Country Magazine), 1940 Gouache on paper, 40 x 30 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg 255 Pavel Tchelitchew Composition with Maltese Cross, 1956 Oil on canvas, 130 x 97 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg 256 Pavel Tchelitchew La Noix, 1955 Gouache on paper, 40 x 30 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg Please note: Press images are only released for use in book reviews. Please name (where specified) the respective photographer/copyright holder and refrain from cropping the images. Thank you! www.arnoldsche.com | page 4 Press RELEASE | PAVEL TCHELITCHEW 212 Pavel Tchelitchew Little Red Riding Hood, 1940 Gouache on cardboard, 76,2 x 50,8 cm Alexander Kuznetsov & Pavel Melyakov Collection, St Petersburg Press Images Please download the images from www.arnoldsche.com/en/Press/New-books Portrait2 Pavel Tchelitchew 1933/35 Archives and Special Collections, Dickinson College, Carlisle PA Courtesy of Dickinson College, Carlisle PA Please note: Press images are only released for use in book reviews. Please name (where specified) the respective photographer/copyright holder and refrain from cropping the images. Thank you! www.arnoldsche.com | page 5 Press RELEASE | PAVEL TCHELITCHEW Portrait Pavel Tchelitchew Photograph by George Platt Lynes Private Collection