EL LISSITZKY (1890-1941)
EL LISSITZKY (1890-1941)
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
EL LISSITZKY (1890-1941)

Neuer, Plate 10 from Sieg über die Sonne

Details
EL LISSITZKY (1890-1941)
Neuer, Plate 10 from Sieg über die Sonne
lithograph in colours, 1923, on wove paper, signed in pencil, from the edition of 75, with wide margins, probably the full sheet, pale mount and backboard staining, a few pale pinpoint foxmarks, otherwise in good condition, framed
Image 325 x 325 mm., Sheet 533 x 455 mm.
Provenance
With Alice Adam Ltd., Chicago.
Francey and Dr. Martin L. Gecht, Chicago; acquired from the above in 1988; their single owner sale, Christie's, New York, 3 May 2006, lot 139 ($ 45,600).
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
Literature
Eindhoven Museum 70

Brought to you by

James Baskerville
James Baskerville

Lot Essay

Neuer (New Man) is one of a series of nine lithographs intended as stage designs for a futuristic opera called Victory over the Sun by Aleksei Kruchenykh and Michail Matyushin. The opera was performed for the first time in 1913 in Saint Petersburg, directed by Diaghilev with robotic costumes and abstract sets by Malevitch. Involving a plot in which the sun is cast out of the heavens as an outmoded form of light and energy, and superseded by technology, the opera was a radical, utopian vision of the transformation of mankind.
Lissitzky’s interpretation of the opera was even more radical than Malevich’s, envisaging the use of mechanical puppets instead of living performers, controlled by a single Schaugestalter (Show-realiser). [The bodies] ‘glide, roll, float, on, in, and over the stage. All the parts of the stage and all the bodies are set in motion by means of electromechanical forces and devices, and the control centre is in the hands of a single individual’
(El Lissitzky, Suprematism in World Reconstruction, quoted in: R. Heller, Stark Impressions: Graphic Production in Germany, 1918-1933, M. & L. Block Gallery, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1993, p. 340.).

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