| Natalia
Goncharova, Russian (1881 - 1962)
Natalia Sergeevna Goncharova (Russian: June 4, 1881 - October
17, 1962) was a prominent Russian Cubo-Futurism painter and
costume designer.
Goncharova was born in Nagaevo village near Tula, Russia in
1881. She studied sculpture at the Moscow Academy of Art, but
turned to painting in 1904. She was deeply inspired by the
primitive aspects of Russian folk art and attempted to emulate
it in her own work while incorporating elements of fauvism
and cubism. Together with her husband Mikhail Larionov she
first developed Rayonism. They were the main progenitors of
the pre-Revolution Russian avant-garde organising the Donkey's
Tail exhibition of 1912 and showing with the Der Blaue Reiter
in Munich the same year.
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. However, the influence of Futurism
is much in evidence in Goncharova's later paintings. Initially
preoccupied with icon painting and the primitivism of ethnic
Russian folk-art, Goncharova became famous in Russia for her
Futurist work such as The Cyclist and her later Rayonnist works.
As leaders of the Moscow Futurists, they organised provocative
lecture evenings in the same vein as their Italian counterparts.
Goncharova was also involved with graphic design - writing
and illustrating a book in Futurist style.
Goncharova was a member of the Der Blaue Reiter avant-garde
group from its founding in 1911. In 1915, she began to design
ballet costumes and sets in Geneva. She moved to Paris in 1921
where she designed a number of stage sets of Sergei Diaghilev's
Ballets Russes.
In 1962 she died in Paris.
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