Open Fora

Whose Malevich? Why Malevich?

Authors

  • Vita Susak Memoriart33-45 Association, Bern

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5077/journals/connexe.2019.e255

Keywords:

Malevich, abstract art, national identity, cultural and memory politics, Ukraine, Poland, Russia

Abstract

Just half a century ago, Malevich’s name was familiar to very few people. On a wave of international interest to the avant-garde, he became a world-famous artist. Kazimir Malevich (1879–1935) was born into a Polish family in Kyiv and created the Black Square (1915) in Moscow. These are the most important facts that today
allow three countries (Poland, Ukraine, and Russia) to consider him as their “own” artist. Art historians and curators actively research Malevich’s work, usually arguing that he belongs to the culture they themselves represent.
This paper gives a brief overview of the discovery of Malevich in the West and of his late recognition in the USSR. It also deals with the growth of his popularity since the early 1980s, and provides examples of the current use of his name and work in cultural-political narratives. Malevich’s legacy has gone far beyond art history to
become iconic in each of the three countries. Today the abstract visual language unseats realistic images due to its universal nature; pure abstract forms become incorporated with their three-dimensional configurations into urban spaces. Million-dollar prices at auctions encourage counterfeits, resulting in some huge scandals. Suprematist language is employed in a very broad range: from the tragic to the entertaining. Malevich becomes a “trump card” in national “decks.” It is precisely the international meaning of Malevich’s ideas that has caused national “competition” for this author.

Author Biography

Vita Susak, Memoriart33-45 Association, Bern

Independant researcher
Memoriart33-45 Association, Bern (CH)

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Published

23-10-2020

How to Cite

Susak, Vita. 2020. “Open Fora: Whose Malevich? Why Malevich?”. Connexe: Exploring Post-Communist Spaces 5 (October):139-55. https://doi.org/10.5077/journals/connexe.2019.e255.