Natalia Sergeevna Goncharova (Russian:Ната́лья Серге́евна Гончаро́ва,IPA:[nɐˈtalʲjəsʲɪrˈɡʲe(j)ɪvnəɡənʲtɕɪˈrovə]; 3 July 1881 – 17 October 1962) was a Russianavant-garde artist, painter,costume designer, writer, illustrator, andset designer. Goncharova's lifelong partner was fellow Russian avant-garde artistMikhail Larionov. She was a founding member of both theJack of Diamonds (1909–1911), Moscow's first radical independent exhibiting group, the more radicalDonkey's Tail (1912–1913), and with Larionov inventedRayonism (1912–1914). She was also a member of the German-based art movementDer Blaue Reiter. Born in Russia, she moved to Paris in 1921 and lived there until her death.
Her painting vastly influenced theavant-garde in Russia. Her exhibitions held in Moscow and St Petersburg (1913 and 1914) were the first promoting a "new" artist by an independent gallery. When it came to the pre-revolutionary period in Russia, where decorative painting andicons were a secure profession, her modern approach to rendering icons was both transgressive and problematic. She was one of the leading figures in the avant-garde in Russia and carried this influence with her to Paris.[1][2]
Her immediate family were highly educated and considered themselves politically liberal. Her father designed and built their home, where both Natalia and her brother Afanasii grew up. They were both raised and educated by their mother and grandmother. They lived in theOrlov andTula provinces, and soon Goncharova moved to Moscow to pursue the Fourth Women's Gymnasium in 1892, from which she graduated in 1898. She tried several career paths (zoology, history, botany, and medicine), before deciding on sculpture.[citation needed]
At the end of the century the gender segregation in the official art institutions was no longer implemented, but still denied women the right to get the diploma upon the completion. She withdrew from theMoscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in 1909, in favor of classes atIlya Mashkov and Alexander Mikhailovsky's studios, where she was able to study male and female nudes, and was trained the equivalent of what she would have learnt upon completion at the Moscow School had she been male. In 1910, a number of students were expelled fromKonstantin Korovin's portrait class for imitating the contemporary style of European Modernism, with Goncharova, Larionov,Robert Falk,Pyotr Konchalovsky,Alexander Kuprin,Ilya Mashkov amongst them.[citation needed]
Goncharova and other artists at aDonkey's Tail exhibition, 1912
The students rejected from Korovin's classes, and others, soon formed Moscow's first radical independent exhibiting group, theJack of Diamonds, which was named by Larionov.[6] This is rather a provocative name, as it alludes to both boulevard literature and the prison uniforms.[9]
The Jack of Diamonds' first exhibition (December 1910–January 1911) includedPrimitivist andCubist paintings by Goncharova, but the group split in half in 1912, Mikhail Larionov distancing fromAristarkh Lentulov andPyotr Konchalovsky and forming a more provocative group, theDonkey's Tail. At the latter group's first exhibition (March–April 1912) organized by Larionov, more than fifty of her paintings were on display.[6] Goncharova drew inspirations for primitivism from Russian icons and folk art, otherwise known asluboks.[10] The Donkey's Tail was conceived as an intentional break from European art influence and the establishment of an independent Russian school of modern art. The exhibition proved controversial, and the censor confiscated Goncharova's religiously-themed work,The Evangelists (1910–11), deeming itblasphemous partly because it was hung at an exhibition titled after the rear end of a donkey,[4] partly because it blended sacred and profane imagery, and also because there were taboos for women to paint icons.[11]
Goncharova and her partner, Larionov, were continuously harassed for their artwork and the way they expressed themselves.[10] However, the influence ofRussian Futurism is much in evidence in Goncharova's later paintings. Initially preoccupied with icon painting and the primitivism of ethnic Russian folk-art, Goncharova soon began to mix Cubist and Futurist elements in her work, which led to the beginnings ofCubo-Futurism.[12] In Russia, she was to become famous for her work in this style, such asCyclist. In 1911, she and Larionov developedRayonism, and produced many paintings in that style. As leaders of theRussian Futurists,[13] they organized provocative lecture evenings in the same vein as their Italian counterparts. Goncharova was also involved with graphic design—writing, and illustrated several avant-garde books.[14]
Rayonist Lilies, 1913
Another important exhibition Goncharova participated in is called The Target (March–April 1913) and No. 4 (March–April 1914). She played a very important role when it came to Russian art at the time. Her aesthetic choices that were bridging the Eastern and Western traditions, served as a catalyst for manifestos and art movements at the time. She was one of the leading artists in Cubo-Futurist (Airplane over a Train, 1912) and Rayonist (Yellow and Green Forest, 1913) circles.[citation needed]
Even though her pre-World War I art still had problematic associations, her participation in these exhibits were a segue for Moscow's avant-garde blending of both Western European Modernism and Eastern traditions. In one of her interviews, she said that she got inspiration fromPicasso, Le Fauconnier, andBraque, but still her first "Cubist" works to date as long as one year before that.[9]
She was also notorious for her occasionally shocking public behaviour. When Goncharova and Larionov first became interested inPrimitivism, they painted hieroglyphics and flowers on their faces and walked through the streets; Goncharova herself sometimes appeared topless in public with symbols on her chest as part of her manifesto "Why We Paint Our Faces".[10]
She exhibited at theSalon d'Automne (Exposition de L'art Russe) in 1906.[15]
Goncharova was a member of the avant-gardeDer Blaue Reiter group from its founding in 1911. In 1915, she began to design ballet costumes and sets inGeneva. In 1915 she started work on a series of designs –Six Winged Seraph,Angel,St Andrew,St Mark,Nativity, and others – for a ballet commissioned bySergei Diaghilev, to be titledLiturgy. Also involved in the project, for whichIgor Stravinsky was invited to compose the score, were Larionov andLéonide Massine, but the ballet never materialized.[16] Goncharova moved to Paris in 1921 where she designed a number of stage sets of Diaghilev'sBallets Russes. She also exhibited at theSalon d'Automne in 1921, and participated regularly at theSalon des Tuileries and theSalon des Indépendants.[citation needed]
Goncharova also identified with Everythingism (russ. Vsechestvo), the Russian avant-garde movement. Everythingism was considered as an extension of Neo-Primitivism. This art promotes heterogeneity, a blending of multiple cultural traditions, such as West and East and different styles such asCubism andFuturism. It aspired to erase the boundaries between what is considered the origin and the copy, and assimilated those together. It was an art movement that was free of already set artistic laws.[9]
Together with Larionov, she left Russia and went to Paris on 29 April 1914. In that year she designed costumes and sets for theBallets Russes's premiere ofThe Golden Cockerel in the city. Goncharova and Larionov collaborated on four events in Paris for the benefit of the Union des Artistes Russes. These events were the Grand Bal des Artistes or the Grand Bal Travesti Transmental (23 February 1923), the Bal Banal (14 March 1924), the Bal Olympique or the Vrai Bal Sportif (11 July 1924), and the Grand Ourse Bal (8 May 1925). They both designed much of the publicity materials for the event.[17]
Between 1922 and 1926, Goncharova created fashion designs forMarie Cuttoli's shop, Maison Myrbor on the Rue Vincent, Paris. Her richly embroidered andappliquéd dress designs were strongly influenced by Russian folk art,Byzantine mosaic and her work for theBallets Russes.[18][19]
In 1938 Goncharova became aFrench national.[20] On 2 June 1955, four years after Larionov suffered a stroke, the two artists got married in Paris to safeguard their rights of inheritance.[20] Influenced by the School of Paris, her style moved from Cubism nearer toNeoclassicism.[9] Goncharova was the first of the pair to die, seven years later, on 17 October 1962, in Paris after a debilitating struggle withrheumatoid arthritis.[21]
Contradictions between country life and city life left a residue in Goncharova's artistic production and places it within European and RussianModernism of that time. The urban Moscow, fast-paced life, and the relaxed summer retreats in the country are highly apparent in her art. Photographs of her in the family estate show her wearing peasant clothes in combination with city shoes. Her early self-portraits deal with identity, where her interest in elite masquerades is revealed. In one she dresses as a gentlewoman; in other, she is in a domestic environment wearing a dress; others focus on her identity as a painter (for exampleSelf-Portrait with Yellow Lilies, 1907.)[citation needed]
Her early pastels and painting are influenced by the family main estate inKaluga province, called Polotnianyi Zavod. The description of the life there suggests that the leisure part and the work part blurred together, and as such may be associated with the liberal reforms in Russia of the time. The inspiration Goncharova draws from the lifestyle is mostly taken from observing the everyday activities of the servants and peasants who lived there. That is evident in the number of her gardening images that can be identified with the landscape of this property.[9]
Goncharova had a successful career in fashion, where she was producing costumes forthe Ballets Russes. The style was influenced by her involvement in theavant-garde in combination with her Russian heritage. In France, she worked forMarie Cuttolis's shop at House of Myrbor (Maison de Myrbor), where her Slavic heritage influenced the abstract design that was favored by the avant-garde.[citation needed]
She also worked for a famous designer Nadejda Lamonava in Moscow, where her completely artistic expression came to life. She experimented with abstract design, colors, patterns, different combinations of material, and evidently reacting against the prevailing fashion forOrientalism. Her designs were both influenced by Russian tradition and theByzantine mosaics, which are visible in both the costumes and the dresses.[22] Her work also exhibitsPrimitivist tendencies.[23]
In 1961 the Arts Council of Great Britain held a major retrospective of Goncharova's and Larionov's work.[2] TheTate Modern in London held aRetrospective in 2019.[24] In 2019 an exhibition on Goncharova was held at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence.[25] In 2020: The co-operated exhibition of Tate Modern, Palazzo Strozzi andAteneum moved to Helsinki, Finland (27 February until 17 May)[26]
Portrait of Natalia Goncharova byMikhail Larionov (1915)’’Study of the woman - Portrait of Natalia Goncharova)’’ byMikhail Larionov (1912)
On 18 June 2007, Goncharova's 1909 paintingPicking Apples was auctioned atChristie's for $9.8 million, setting a record for any female artist at the time.[34] She is considered one of the most expensive women artists at auction,[35] and her work features in Russian art auctions during the bi-annualRussian Art Week in London.
In November 2007,Bluebells (1909) brought £3.1 million ($6.2 million).[36] In 2008, Goncharova's 1912 still-lifeThe Flowers (formerly part ofGuillaume Apollinaire's collection) sold for $10.8 million.[37][38]
In 2019, a scholar researching the life of the Czech Futurist painterRůžena Zátková found two previously unknowngouaches by Goncharova in a private collection; both the works were dedicated to Zatkova, and were from 1916.[39] The two artists had been friends since 1915, sinceSergei Diaghilev had invited them,Mikhail Larionov, and Diaghilev's troupe, theBallets Russes, to stay with him in his rented Swiss villa, and the works were made whilst Zatkova was ill with tuberculosis.[39]
^abSharp, Jane A. (2000)."Natalia Goncharova". In Bowlt, John E.; Drutt, Matthew (eds.).Amazons of the avant-garde: Alexandra Exter, Natalia Goncharova, Liubov Popova, Olga Rozanova, Varvara Stepanova, and Nadezhda Udaltsova. New York: Guggenheim Museum. p. 155.ISBN0-8109-6924-6.
^abcGray, Camilla (1962).The Great Experiment: Russian Art 1863–1922. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 98.
^Gray, Camilla (1962).The Great Experiment: Russian Art 1863–1922. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 88.
^Gerhardus, Mary; Gerhardus, Dietfried (1979).Cubism and Futurism. Phaidon. p. 74.
^Sharp, Jane Ashton, 1956- (2006).Russian modernism between East and West : Natal'ia Goncharova and the Moscow avant-garde. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN0-521-83162-8.OCLC56405038.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Norton, Leslie.Léonide Massine and the 20th Century Ballet . McFarland, 2004. p. 12.ISBN0786417528
^Federle, Courtney (January 1, 1992). "Kuchenmesser DADA: Hannah Höch's Cut Through the Field of Vision".Qui Parle.5 (2):120–134.JSTOR20685953.
^Lussier, Suzanne (2006).Art deco fashion (Repr. ed.). London: V&A Publications. p. 46.ISBN9781851773909.Goncharova's primitive interpretation of Russian folk art and Byzantine mosaics was evident not only in her costumes for the Ballets Russes but also in her designs for Myrbor
^Howard, Jeremy (February 28, 2015).Vladimir Markov and Russian primitivism : a charter for the avant-garde. Farnham, Surrey.ISBN978-1-4724-3974-1.OCLC889577491.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^"Goncharova, Natalia".Collections Online. Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Archived fromthe original on July 15, 2012. RetrievedOctober 27, 2011.