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#yakov chernikhov
jareckiworld · 16 days
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Yakov Chernikhov (1889-1951) — Architectural Fantasies № 95 [Leningrad, 1929-1932]
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natvoltaic · 1 year
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Yakov Chernikhov
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pwlanier · 1 year
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Chernikhov Yakov Georgievich (1889-1952) "Composition". 1920s.
Paper, ink
Without a signature.
Preservation: slight contamination of the sheet.
Origin: collection of the author's heirs.
Expert opinion of T.V. Goryacheva, V.S. Silaeva.
Chernikhov's graphics, especially his works of the 1920s and 1930s, influenced the development of modern architecture in the XX century. Many famous modern architects openly call him their inspirer and absentee teacher.
Soviet architect, graphic artist, painter and architectural theorist. He graduated from the Odessa Art School (in those years - a branch of the Imperial Academy of Arts), the painting faculty of the Academy of Arts, as well as the Higher Pedagogical Courses. In 1916 he moved to the Faculty of Architecture, where he studied under the guidance of L.N. Benoit. In 1927, he organized a "Research experimental laboratory of architectural forms and methods of graphing" in Leningrad. At the turn of the 1920s-1930s, he published books of architectural fantasies in Leningrad, which brought him worldwide fame: "Fundamentals of Modern Architecture" (1929-1930), "Constructions of Architectural and Machine Forms" (1931), "Architectural Fantasies. 101 Compositions" (1933). In 1933, he participated in the exhibition "2222 architectural fantasies" in Leningrad. In the 1930s and 1940s, he performed several cycles of graphic works, including "Architecture of the Future", "Palaces of Communism", "Architectural Ensembles" and others.
Litfund
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Yakov Chernikhov (Russian, 1889-1951). Green-grey-yellow geometric composition.
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hellohaters · 3 years
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Yakov Chernikhov
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polba · 4 years
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conformi · 6 years
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Jakov Georgievič Černichov, Theater composition, F-22, 1920s VS Eduardo Chillida, Elogio del Horizonte, Gijón, Spain, 1990
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ohbender · 6 years
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Yakov Chernikhov, from Architectural Tales
1931-1944
see more
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Yakov Chernikhov
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softpyramids · 6 years
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jareckiworld · 1 month
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Yakov Chernikhov (1889-1951) — Suprematist Composition [gouache and ink, on paperboard, 1922]
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natvoltaic · 1 year
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Yakov Chernikhov
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pwlanier · 1 year
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YAKOV CHERNIKHOV
1889-1951
Untitled from the series The Course of Dimensional Art, mid 1920s
gouache and ink on paper
James Butterwick
Note: Yakov Chernikhov was born in Pavlograd, down river from the now infamous city of Dnipro in 1889. One of eleven children, Chernikhov studied under Kiriak Kostandi (1852-1921) and Genadii Ladyzhensky (1853-1916) at the Odessa Arts Institute, the city to which the family had moved in 1902.
In 1912, Chernikhov began teaching at the Institute before continuing his studies at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St Petersburg from 1914, moving to the Architecture Department in 1916. Graduating in 1925, Chernikhov embarked on a stellar career setting up the Scientific Research Experimental Laboratory of Architectural Forms and Methods of Graphic Representation, almost a personal education college, in 1927. There, together with his students, his worked on his role as an ‘artist architect’, producing a staggering quantity of work.
His work “Architectural Fantasies” is widely considered the last avant-garde art book published during the Stalinist era. Greatly interested in constructivism and suprematism, Chernikhov’s individualism led him into conflict with the regime and resulted in only of a handful of his architectural projects being realised.
Cited as an influence by Zahar Khadid, Chernikhov remains one of the most important graphic artists of the Russian and Ukrainian School.
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Yakov Chernikhov (Russian, 1889-1951). Blue-green-yellow geometric composition.
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hellohaters · 3 years
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Yakov Chernikhov
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sesiondemadrugada · 7 years
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Yakov Chernikhov.
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