Valentina Kulagina, full name Valentina Nikiforovna Kulagina-Klutsis (russian: Валентина Никифоровна Кулагина-Клуцис, 1902–1987) was a Russian painter and book, poster, and exhibition designer. She was a central figure in
Constructivist avant-garde
The avant-garde (; In 'advance guard' or ' vanguard', literally 'fore-guard') is a person or work that is experimental, radical, or unorthodox with respect to art, culture, or society.John Picchione, The New Avant-garde in Italy: Theoretical ...
in the early 20th century alongside
El Lissitzky
Lazar Markovich Lissitzky (russian: link=no, Ла́зарь Ма́ркович Лиси́цкий, ; – 30 December 1941), better known as El Lissitzky (russian: link=no, Эль Лиси́цкий; yi, על ליסיצקי), was a Russian artist ...
,
Alexander Rodchenko
Aleksander Mikhailovich Rodchenko (russian: link=no, Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Ро́дченко; – 3 December 1956) was a Russian and Soviet artist, sculptor, photographer, and graphic designer. He was one of the founders ...
other and her husband
Gustav Klutsis
Gustav Klutsis ( lv, Gustavs Klucis, russian: Густав Густавович Клуцис; 4 January 1895 – 26 February 1938) was a pioneering Latvian photographer and major member of the Constructivist avant-garde in the early 20th centur ...
. She is known for the Soviet revolutionary and Stalinist propaganda she produced in collaboration with Klutsis.
Biography
Kulagina left State Free Art Studios and entered the state-run art school
Vkhutemas in 1920 at the urging of teacher Gustav Klutsis, whom she had recently met. On 2 February 1921, the couple wed and lived together at the school's headquarters.
[Gustav Klutsis and Valentina Kulagina: Photography and Montage After Constructivism](_blank)
museum.icp.org (2004) In 1928, Kulagina joined the artists' group October, of which her husband was already a member. In 1930 she designed a poster for
International Working Women's Day
International Women's Day (IWD) is a global holiday celebrated annually on March 8 as a focal point in the women's rights movement, bringing attention to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against w ...
, employing avant-garde techniques combined with
typography
Typography is the art and technique of arranging type to make written language legible, readable and appealing when displayed. The arrangement of type involves selecting typefaces, point sizes, line lengths, line-spacing ( leading), ...
,
lithography
Lithography () is a planographic method of printing originally based on the immiscibility of oil and water. The printing is from a stone (lithographic limestone) or a metal plate with a smooth surface. It was invented in 1796 by the German a ...
, and
photomontage
Photomontage is the process and the result of making a composite photograph by cutting, gluing, rearranging and overlapping two or more photographs into a new image. Sometimes the resulting composite image is photographed so that the final image ...
. Starting in 1932 Kulagina saw her works frequently rejected by the Communist Party's
Central Committee.
Her work as a designer began before she graduated the school, with the Soviet Pavilion at the Pressa exhibition in Cologne including areas which she designed. Later, she worked for IZOGIZ (the State Art Publishing Agency) and VOKS (the All-Union Society of Cultural Relations with Abroad) and VSKhV (The All-Union Agricultural Exhibition).
Klutsis' and Kulagina's work was complementary, and their style of photomontage combined with graphic work saw them implemented as official revolutionary poster producers for the Communist Party under Stalin.
In the late 1930s,
The Great Purge began to occur and many civilians were accused of having anti-communist ideals or encouraging the success of the revolution; both Kulagina’s father and husband were accused.
On 17 January 1938, Klutsis was arrested as he prepared to leave for the
New York World's Fair. Kulagina was never told the truth as to what happened to her husband, believing for the remainder of her life that he had died of a heart attack while imprisoned.
In 1989, two years after her death in Moscow, it was discovered that he had been executed by order of Stalin, very soon after his arrest.
Work
Within the early formation of Soviet Union, politics was a potent influence on the artistic community, and the art and design produced during this early period is known for its revolutionary zeal and joyous utopianism. With this subject matter, Kulagina's work combined drawing and graphic symbolism with photomontage techniques (that had been pioneered by her husband). It was a combination that distinctively separated her work from Klutsis'. Klutsis and Kulagina never worked on projects together, their work was collaborative nevertheless, and was strengthened by one being around the other.
After the
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, political unrest grew and the past revolutionary spirit seen in Russian art turned into propagandist work. By the beginning of the 1930s, poster production was strictly reserved for commissioned artists as well as the images, text, and symbols used. Posters made by amateur artists were destroyed and confiscated.
In a diary entry by Kulgalina dated 1935, she documented the frustration and difficulty in making posters for Stalin and the government, only for them to be chosen under strict guidelines promoting censorship in her work. Most posters of this time were rejected or sent back for major revision.
Though Klutsis and Kulagina are known for these official pieces for the government, they also ran a personal art and photography practice, utilising styles such as superimposition and photomontage, often portraits of each other.
Following the radical change happening, in 1931 Kulgalina made the piece "International Women Workers Day–A Battle for the Proletariat" (Mezhdunarodnyiden’ rabotnits—boevoi den’ proletariata), a propagandist poster which commends women in the workforce. She used figurative painting and photomontage on this poster to portray female soldiers, peasants, farmers, and a group of women in the streets fighting with police.
As the political environment in Russia began to dissolve in the 1930s, Klutsis and Kulagina came under increasing pressure to limit the subject matter and humour that they had employed for official posters and graphic work, and their posters came to represent Stalinist visual rhetoric and propaganda rather than its original revolutionary hope.
By 1933, propagandist posters had become such a common artform with little room for original pieces. Kulagina states in her diary that, ‘But there is no inventiveness, no creativity. Or formalism is what destroys someone like me? But it seems to me that one always has to look for something pointed — and at Izogiz, they like posters that are barely distinguishable from one another.’
Kulagina, along with other photomontage artists, experienced a major cutback on poster commissions because of paper and ink shortages. As a result, her work of this time was limited to two colors because each additional color increased the production time.
See also
*
List of Soviet poster artists
{{Unreferenced, date=October 2016
This is a list of Soviet poster artists.
Soviet poster artists
* Mikhail Baljasnij
* Mikhail Cheremnykh
* Nikolai Chomov
* Viktor Deni
* Nikolai Dolgorukov
* Boris Efimov
* Vladimir Galb
* Iulii Ganf
...
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kulagina, Valentina
1902 births
1987 deaths
Russian women painters
Constructivism (art)
Soviet women artists
Soviet artists
20th-century Russian painters
20th-century Russian women artists