{"id":51942,"date":"2019-11-16T18:39:20","date_gmt":"2019-11-16T17:39:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/?page_id=51942"},"modified":"2019-12-23T18:17:17","modified_gmt":"2019-12-23T17:17:17","slug":"biography","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/en\/biography\/","title":{"rendered":"Alexandra Exter (1882-1949)"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-medium\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01-300x300.jpg\" alt=\"Portrait d'Exter\" class=\"wp-image-52301\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01-600x600.jpg 600w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-01.jpg 1000w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:50px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\">A painter of unquestionable originality and equally great constancy of  creativity, Alexandra Exter is the artist to whom we owe the birth of  constructivist painting in Russia. After a Cubist period in Paris  between 1910 and 1912, Exter rapidly moved on to incorporate the  principles of the Futurist dynamic into her work. Inspired by Malewicz\u2019s  revolutionary Suprematist work, with which she had been actively  involved in the Fall of 1915, and this before all her \u201cnon-objectivist\u201d  comrades (the term was used in Moscow for the first time in relation to  paintings by Exter exhibited in 1915), she nonetheless went on in  1916-1918 to develop a language of abstract forms and a logic of  compositional structures free of allegiance to the unconditionally  autonomous aesthetic of Suprematism. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Attracted during her first period in Paris (1910-1914) to the \nprospect of a new decorative art based on Cubo-Futurist principles, she \nwas at the origin of the first exhibitions of modern decorative art \n(Moscow 1915 and 1917). Thereafter she was to develop her extraordinary \ntalent in the field of stage design. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-columns is-layout-flex wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7 wp-block-columns-is-layout-flex\">\n<div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis:67%\">\n<p> After having lived through the disasters of the civil war, in both human and material terms, Exter sought to leave South Russia as early as 1919. Finally in June 1924, on the pretext of mounting her works at the Venice Biennale, she escaped the Soviet Union. After a brief stay in Italy, she arrived in Paris at the end of the year and lived there until her death in 1949. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Throughout the nineteen twenties and thirties, Exter divided her time  between painting works of the \u201cpurist\u201d type, designing stage decors,  teaching, and book illustration where her talent flourished phenomenally  but which has yet to attract the attention it deserves. The same is  true of for her abstract painting, the originality of which has still  not been thoroughly perceived. Her \u201cconstructive\u201d originality and the  variety of her pictorial inventions are such that art critics accustomed  to classifying works based on clich\u00e9s of \u201cgeometric styles\u201d remain  disoriented. Thus, at a recent \u201cconstructivist\u201d exhibition at the Tate  Gallery in London, Exter\u2019s work was included \u201chors catalogue\u201d alongside  Rodchenko\u2019s and Popova\u2019s, artists that for decades have set the tone of  formalist classifications, if not already \u201cpost-modernists\u201d. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-column is-layout-flow wp-block-column-is-layout-flow\" style=\"flex-basis:33%\">\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"657\" height=\"1024\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-02-657x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-52307\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-02-657x1024.jpg 657w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-02-192x300.jpg 192w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-02-768x1197.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-portrait-02.jpg 922w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 657px) 100vw, 657px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>In the last decades of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century, a period marked by  the rediscovery of Russian constructivism, her close ties to Western art  and her status as a refugee stood in the way of the recognition her  work should have received in her native Russia. All the more so since  her painting was often at the forefront the avant-garde and Russian art  scenes in the 1910s. Because of her friendships with both Malewicz and  Tatlin, she often played the role of peacemaker during the typically  avant-garde conflicts that erupted ineluctably. This was the case during  preparation for the 0,10 exhibition (December 1915), which could have  ended in disaster without Exter\u2019s diplomatic mediation. The loss of many  of her paintings, left in 1917 in the home of her former father-in-law  where she had a studio, was another obstacle to the recognition of the  significance of her pure pictorial work.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50657\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50657\" style=\"width: 1024px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Atelier-02.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-0\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-large wp-image-52308\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Atelier-02-1024x720.jpg\" alt=\"L'atelier d'Exter \u00e0 Paris\" width=\"1024\" height=\"810\"><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50657\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">L&#8217;atelier d&#8217;Exter \u00e0 Paris<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>Highly appreciated in both personal and artistic terms, \u201cMadame  Exter\u201d, as she was respectfully known in Moscow and Saint Petersburg,  had a key role in the modernist constellation in Russia, participating  in most of the exhibitions that marked the rise of non-objective  painting. In Kiev, her role was indisputably preponderant. After her  return to Paris in 1925, she had a no-less first-rate European career. Although, due to the general loss in interest in abstract art in Europe at the time, the focus of Exter\u2019s creative work concentrated on stage design. She did, however, suffer from a lessening of opportunities for modernist artists starting in the thirties. This, added to health problems, made her life increasingly difficult. Deprived of professional opportunities, by the end of the twenties, she was forced to retreat to a modest house in the Parisian suburb of Fontenay-aux-Roses. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Shortly before she died, Exter bequeathed her studio and documentation to a Russian friend, a painter who had immigrated from Kiev to Paris and  subsequently to the United States. A revival of interest in her work began only in the early seventies, but much remains still to be done  before her work can gain its rightful place in 20th-century art. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center align-center\">* * *<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n<p>Born in Bialystok (today a Polish city) Alexandra Exter (n\u00e9e  Grigorievitch) lived out her childhood and adolescence in Kiev. Kiev was a city of cosmopolitan culture, very receptive to contacts with the West, which it maintained as much with Cracow and Dresden as with Munich, Vienna, and Paris. Far from the overweening ambitions that  poisoned relations in Saint Petersburg and from Moscow\u2019s intense competitiveness with regard to Saint Petersburg and Paris, a certain relaxed provincial atmosphere freed young artists in Kiev from pretentions to superiority. News of new artistic developments in the West arrived as quickly in Kiev as in Moscow, but stirred less competitive reactions. Its cosmopolitan population (Moldavian, Jewish, and especially Polish), with their European aspirations, absorbed these influences in a non-partisan way. Exter developed also a facility in  early childhood for other languages and cultures. After finishing her  studies in the local Fine Arts school, the young Exter, whose charm and  talent facilitated her social ascension, had but one desire: to pursue her studies in Paris, indisputable capital of world art at the time. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50659\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50659\" style=\"width: 201px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Soffici.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-1\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-52310\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Soffici-201x300.jpg\" alt=\"Ardengo Soffici\" width=\"201\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Soffici-201x300.jpg 201w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Soffici-686x1024.jpg 686w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Soffici.jpg 722w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 201px) 100vw, 201px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50659\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Ardengo Soffici<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>When she went to France for a few months in 1907, she spent time in the  \u201cacademies\u201d (free studios) of Montparnasse, in particular in the studio  of Carlo Delvall at the Grande Chaumi\u00e8re. In 1910, she rented a studio  on a permanent basis at 10 Rue Boissonade right in the heart of  Montparnasse. Here too her charming personality and intelligence full of  finesse quickly opened doors for her. She was a frequent visitor to the  Parisian salon of Elisabeth Epstein, a Russian student of Matisse and  friend of Kandinsky and Delaunay, and to the salon of Serge F\u00e9rat,  patron of the journal Les Soir\u00e9es de Paris, headed by Apollinaire in  1912-1914. Her relationship to Robert and Sonia Delaunay opened other  artistic and social prospects for her; through them she met the Cubist  collector and art historian Wilhelm Uhde and the Berlin gallery owner  Herwerth Walden, a fervent champion of the Delaunays and of the most  daring new European painting. Through these relations, she also met the  Futurist art critic and painter Ardengo Soffici, with whom she had a  love relationship during the \u201cSoir\u00e9es de Paris\u201d years. Soffici left some  highly romanticized, not to say frivolous, descriptions of their  liaison in his memoirs, a romantic elaboration which artistic importance  has been lately highly exaggerated by some superficial art critics. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Drawn as much to Cubism as to Futurism, Exter was soon caught up in a  social and artistic whirlwind in Paris that was hardly restricted to  Cubist orthodoxy alone. For her avant-garde friends \u2013 in particular the  poet Benedict Livshitz, and the painter and editor David Burljuk \u2013 her  trips back to Kiev were transformed into festivals of modernity, as she  came with new publications, photos, and even original works. She also  organised important avant-garde events like the Kol\u2019tso exhibition (The  Ring, 1914), the only real Futurist exhibition in Kiev if not in the  whole of southern Russia. Compared to the entrenchment of Moscow and the  provincialism of Odessa, Kiev had the atmosphere of a true European  capital.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50662\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50662\" style=\"width: 223px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Aksenov.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-2\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-52311 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Aksenov-223x300.jpg\" alt=\"Ivan Aksionov, Picasso et les alentours\" width=\"223\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Aksenov-223x300.jpg 223w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Aksenov.jpg 567w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 223px) 100vw, 223px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50662\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Ivan Aksionov,<br>Picasso et les alentours<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>In Paris, Exter participated fully in modernist activities. We find her at the Salons des Ind\u00e9pendants and at the Section d\u2019Or exhibition (Fall  1912), a pivotal event that liberated Cubo-Futurism from the narrowly  \u201cgeometric\u201d framework into which anti-modernist critics has hastily categorized nascent Cubism. She spent time at Brancusi\u2019s studio and at Archipenko\u2019s, and helped the young art critic Ivan Aksionov write his  remarkable essay on Cubism Picasso i okrestnosti (Picasso and its  environment). Written in 1914, published in Moscow in 1917 with a cover illustration by Exter, and largely forgotten for many a long decade, the essay was not only one of the first critical texts on Cubism in its  day, it was also the first publication with Picasso\u2019s name in the title.   <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even when she was living and working in Paris, already Alexandra Exter  continued to join in the activities of the Russian avant-garde. As a member of the Saint Petersburg Youth Union and of the Moscovite Jack of Diamonds group, she took part in the annual exhibitions of both organisations starting in 1910. She was so well connected in Parisian circles that Davis Burljuk asked her already in 1910 to act as an  intermediary to Fauconnier in view of organising a \u201cRussian section\u201d at the Salon des Ind\u00e9pendants. And her artwork was so well regarded in Parisian modernist circles that Herwarth Walden proposed her at the end of the spring of 1914 to organise an exhibition in his Berlin gallery Der Sturm. The outbreak of the war thwarted his plans, but that spring Exter was features along with several Russian comrades at the International Exhibition of Futurist Painters and Sculptors at the  Sprovieri Gallery in Rome.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image wp-image-52313 size-large\"><figure class=\"aligncenter\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"717\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-eleves-Kiev-1024x717.jpg\" alt=\"Exter et ses \u00e9l\u00e8ves\" class=\"wp-image-52313\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-eleves-Kiev-1024x717.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-eleves-Kiev-300x210.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-eleves-Kiev-768x538.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-eleves-Kiev.jpg 1452w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><figcaption>Exter et ses \u00e9l\u00e8ves<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>The war brutally interrupted what looked like a promising career in the  West. For the next ten years, Exter found herself stuck in Russia. Back  in Kiev, she opened her studio in 1917 to students and soon discovered  that she had a real talent for teaching. For two years, her studio  became the centre of avant-garde art in the city, where writers, poets,  musicians and dancers would come, and conferences were held. Lissitzky,  Rabinovitch, Ilia Ehrenburg, whose wife Vera Kozintzeva was a student of  Exter, his brother the future filmmaker Grigori Kozintzev, the Polish  composer Karol Szymanowski counted among those who spent time at her  studio. The dancer Bronislawa Nijinskaja offered Exter the possibility  of working on show that she was putting on in Kiev and elsewhere.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Fleeing the very brutal civil war in Kiev, Exter moved to Odessa for  several months in 1919, hoping to find a way out of the country as many  of her friends did, unfortunately in vain. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Soon after the death of her husband in 1917, her mother passed away in  Odessa. The fight that ensued over the heritage, at the instigation of  her father-in-law, dispossessed her of a good part of the paintings she  had left in a house in Kiev. Many of these were destroyed in the  violence of the civil war.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image wp-image-52318 size-full\"><figure class=\"aligncenter\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"1000\" height=\"516\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Famira-Kifared-01.jpg\" alt=\"Famira Kifared\" class=\"wp-image-52318\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Famira-Kifared-01.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Famira-Kifared-01-300x155.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Famira-Kifared-01-768x396.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Famira-Kifared-01-600x310.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><figcaption>Famira Kifared (Thamire le Cithar\u00e8de), 1916<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p>An invitation from Moscovite director Alexandre Tairoff, with whom Exter  had already worked in 1916 and 1917, finally gave her the opportunity  to escape the disastrous effects of the civil war, which were  particularly brutal in the South. Back in Moscow at the end of 1920,  Exter immediately joined the new art groups and social organisations,  dominated at the time by the constructivist wing of the avant-garde. Her  own output went through a new flourishing period of development. Exter  was actively engaged in some of the boldest avant-garde enterprises of  the time, such as the constructivist exhibition 5&#215;5=25 (September 1921)  that marked the apogee of the most radical non-objective painting.  Abstract forms reached a conceptual turning point that the young art  historian Nikolai Tarabukin no sooner qualified as the \u201cend of pictorial  practice\u201d and the \u201csuicide of painting\u201d (see his book From Easel to  Machine, Moscow 1923). Aside from her activities in the field of stage  design, Exter taught in Moscow in the \u201cFree workshops\u201d (Vkhutemas),  worked for Lamanova\u2019s fashion studios and for the movies, making  costumes for the science-fiction film Aelita. Directed by Yakov  Protozanov in 1923 and released at the beginning of 1924, Aelita remains  one of the most visually daring and innovative films of its day. In  1923, she also conceived or created some of the decor for the first  Pan-Russian Exhibition of Agriculture and Industry and designed uniforms  for the new Red Army.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n<p>Exter was already celebrated for her stage designs for Famira Kifared  (1916) and Salome after Oscar Wilde (fall 1917) directed by Tairoff at  the Kamerny Theatre. Salome was so well received in artistic circles in  Moscow, that it was seen as more important than such political events as  the coming to power of the Bolshevik faction, the historical  consequences of which were not easy to evaluate in October 1917.  Familiar as she was with the new stage design ideas featured in the  Diaghilev ballets in Paris between 1910 and 1913 (the work of Bakst as  well as the revolutionary contribution of Vaclav Nijinsky in Afternoon  of a Faune), Exter brought a wind of undeniable novelty to Moscow,  extending the innovative surge with her own radical inventions. <\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50674\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50674\" style=\"width: 439px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-3\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-intermediaire wp-image-52315\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1-439x600.jpg\" alt=\"Rom\u00e9o et Juliette\" width=\"439\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1-439x600.jpg 439w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1-219x300.jpg 219w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1-749x1024.jpg 749w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1-768x1051.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Romeo-et-Juliette-1.jpg 1000w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 439px) 100vw, 439px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50674\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Rom\u00e9o et Juliette<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Her great innovation was to dematerialise the decor by replacing fixed panel sets with a pure light construction whose spatial logic was as rigorous as it was dynamic. In October 1917, the bright austere structure of Salome marked the birth of theatrical Constructivism. The staging was a triumph. By dematerialising the decor, Exter prolonged in a non-objective (abstract) manner the dramatic austerity of Gordon Craig\u2019s monumental d\u00e9cor which has been well known and appreciated in Russia.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p> In his comments on this new staging, Alexandre Tairoff underscored the  revolutionary contribution of Exter\u2019s stage set, which was built up in  vertical planes instead of being designed in a frontal (perpectivist)  way. In his Notes of a Director he wrote in 1921: \u201cExter drew on her  Cubist experience\u201d. This principle of vertical construction culminated  in the spectacular and baroque staging of Romeo and Juliet in 1920.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p> The fall of 1917 saw the triumph of Exter\u2019s painting in Moscow at the  annual Jack of Diamonds exhibition, whose president at the time (if for a  very short moment) was Kazimir Malewicz. With two entire rooms  featuring ninety-two works, including mostly theatre costume projects  and a few abstract and Cubo-Futurist paintings, the artist\u2019s  participation can almost qualify as her first individual show \u2013 a view  that was explicitly expressed by some of the critics at the time.  Whereas the critics Tugendhold and Efros focused in particular on the  coloristic radiance of Exter\u2019s artworks, the public appreciated the  \u201cnarrative\u201d vivacity of her work more readily than the monastic  austerity of Malewicz\u2019s Suprematism.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"img-gauche\">&nbsp;<\/div>\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_915\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-915\" style=\"width: 250px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2012\/10\/Exter-Boulevard.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-4\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-51851\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2012\/10\/Exter-Boulevard.jpg\" alt=\"Alexandra Exter, Boulevard parisien, le soir\" width=\"250\" height=\"318\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2012\/10\/Exter-Boulevard.jpg 250w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2012\/10\/Exter-Boulevard-236x300.jpg 236w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 250px) 100vw, 250px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-915\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Alexandra Exter, Boulevard parisien, le soir, 1914, Galerie Tretyakov, Moscou, donation Georges D. Costakis, 1977, \u00a9 Association Alexandra Exter, Paris 2012<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Exter continued to be active in modernist events in Moscow and Saint Petersburg throughout the 1910s. In the spring of 1915, she participated in the very radical avant-garde exhibition Tramway V held in Saint Petersburg right in the middle of the war, with works selected by Malewicz. Exter showed 14 major Cubo-Futurist paintings. These included several \u201curban landscapes\u201d, Futurist views of \u201cFlorence\u201d (today in the Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow), some \u201cSynthetic Urban View\u201d and \u201cParisian Boulevard in the Evening\u201d (also at the Tretyakov Gallery). The later Futurist work was the closest to the Orphic trend being elaborated in Paris by Picabia and Kupka, among others (Apollinaire coined the term Orphism to describe their work). Like in Giacomo Balla\u2019s work, the energy released by the centrifugal motion in Exter\u2019s painting brings the pictorial planes to a kinetic state of such extreme incandescence that all illustrative reference to forms is superseded.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the wake of this exhibition, Exter developed a privileged  relationship with Malewicz. He let her into his Moscow studio during the  summer of 1915 when he was working in utmost secrecy on his first  Suprematist paintings. In all likelihood, their discussions about Cubism  stimulated Malewicz to conceptualise his definitive view on the new  non-objective art: Suprematism. This is how Exter became the first to  present two abstract paintings by Malewicz to the public, several weeks  before the first show of Suprematist painting at the revolutionary 0,10  exhibition in December 1915 in Petrograd.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50681\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50681\" style=\"width: 402px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Dynamique-de-couleurs.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-5\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-52319 size-intermediaire\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Dynamique-de-couleurs-402x600.jpg\" alt=\"Dynamique de couleurs\" width=\"402\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Dynamique-de-couleurs-402x600.jpg 402w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Dynamique-de-couleurs-201x300.jpg 201w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Dynamique-de-couleurs.jpg 670w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 402px) 100vw, 402px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50681\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Dynamique de couleurs<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The preview organised by Exter opened in Moscow on 6 November 1915. The Exhibition of Contemporary Decorative Art was its title and it was held at the Lemerci\u00e9 Gallery. It benefitted from Exter\u2019s vitality and her modernist connections as much as from the financial support of Nathalie Davydov, herself a painter and a close friend of Exter\u2019s from Kiev, who was a long-time patron and promoter of folkloric decorative art and later became a close follower of Malewicz. The roots of this exhibition in Moscow can be traced back to Paris, where in the spring of 1914 a similar event was planned with a view to grounding the new Cubo-Futurist art \u201cin life\u201d. Sonia Delaunay, Balla and the English Vorticists had already taken decisive steps in this direction. Because of the war, France would have to wait ten years for the Modern Decorative Arts (Exposition des Arts d\u00e9coratifs modernes), an exhibition to open its doors in 1925. Exter, who was back in Paris at the time, participated in this event as a member of the sizeable Russian section.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p> Working at first in Paris and later in Kiev, the artist pursued her very  own pictorial avenue. Her interest in Italian Futurism (Balla,  Boccioni, Severini) and her personal practice of Cubism in its most  abstract form \u2013 which Apollinaire termed Orphism \u2013 ineluctably led her  painting toward greater abstraction, as evidenced in Urban Landscape  (Slobodskoy Museum, Russia). The transition took place in the winter of  1915-1916. In this work, the figurative reminiscences are absorbed by  the mutation of colours to autonomous, purely non-objective planes.  Significantly, when a few years later the work was sent by the Moscow  Museum Office to Slobodskoy it was designated under the title  \u201cNon-Objective Composition\u201d, since that is how it was perceived at the  time.  <\/p>\n\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50682\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50682\" style=\"width: 416px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Composition-des-surfaces-plans-1918-1.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-6\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-52320 size-intermediaire\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Composition-des-surfaces-plans-1918-1-416x600.jpg\" alt=\"Composition des surfaces plans\" width=\"416\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Composition-des-surfaces-plans-1918-1-416x600.jpg 416w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Composition-des-surfaces-plans-1918-1-208x300.jpg 208w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Composition-des-surfaces-plans-1918-1.jpg 694w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 416px) 100vw, 416px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50682\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Composition des surfaces plans, 1918<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>In Kiev, away from the competitive atmosphere of Moscow and especially from the stylistic interferences that resulted from the fierce avant-garde competition, Exter escaped the hold of Suprematism. Given the Western foundations of her artistic conceptions, this enabled her to chart her own autonomous course, to develop a personal vocabulary and an original constructive logic. As a result her painting differed from anything being done in Moscow.<\/p>\n\n\n<p>In 1917 and 1918, her concentration on the energy of colour and the  constructive force it generated led Exter to compositional schemes that  did not owe much to the existential dialectics of Suprematist forms.  Unlike the principle of absolute autonomy of non-objective planes, which  was the maximalist aesthetics forcefully asserted by Malewicz\u2019s  Suprematism, Exter\u2019s planes of colour maintain productive relationships  with one another. Derived from the logic of Cubism, this \u201cconstructive  inter-reaction\u201d yields new formal relationships and new compositional  schemes. Out of this dialogue of energy, a <strong>construction<\/strong> is born in which each component is woven into a fabric of creative interdependence. <\/p>\n\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50688\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50688\" style=\"width: 473px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Venise-1915-Moderna-Museet.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-7\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-intermediaire wp-image-51204\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Venise-1915-471x600.jpg\" alt=\"Venise\" width=\"473\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Venise-1915-236x300.jpg 236w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Venise-1915-118x150.jpg 118w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 473px) 100vw, 473px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50688\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Venise, 1915<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Exter\u2019s abstract work from this period displays a great many compositional constellations. Rare are the painters of her generation to have produced such a variety of compositional types (on could mention Kupka, Franz Marc, Otto Freundich). The energetic logic that defines this autonomy of \u201cliberated colour\u201d is projected into a \u201cmeta-stylistic\u201d state, because energy is an extra-formal concept by definition. This energy circulates wildly in a new freedom that spans utmost rigorous geometry and the nebulous lyricism of an expressionist-type abstraction \u2013 situation where colour is manifested in a state of gestation (<a href=\"\/?p=51172\">see the abstract painting at the Wilhelm Hack Museum in Ludwigshafen<\/a>).<\/p>\n\n\n<p>The freedom that resulted from this purely energetic conception of  colour reached a new level at the \u201cconstructivist\u201d 5&#215;5+25 exhibition  held in Moscow in September 1921. The brief statement by the artist in  the catalogue clearly expressed her colourist approach: \u201cthe works  attest to solutions of colour relationships, the reciprocal tension that results, the rhythms and the passage to a construction of colour alone, construction founded on laws of autonomous colour.\u201d The results of this maturity of colour energy are to be found in a series of  abstract works that were exhibited in the fall of 1922 in Berlin (Van  Diemen  Gallery) and in 1924 at the Venice Biennale. The paintings shown in Venice contributed to establishing the artist\u2019s European reputation, which continued to grow in the following decade.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n<figure id=\"attachment_50702\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50702\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-8\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-52321 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves-300x241.jpg\" alt=\"Bronislawa Nijinskaja et ses \u00e9l\u00e8ves\" width=\"300\" height=\"241\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves-300x241.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves-768x617.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves-600x482.jpg 600w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Nijunskaja-eleves.jpg 1000w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50702\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Bronislawa Nijinskaja et ses \u00e9l\u00e8ves<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Exter\u2019s output for the stage during the same period was impressive: she made costumes and sets for Romeo and Juliet (1921), The Comrade Hlestiakov, The Death of Tarelkin. She worked in Kiev for Bronislava Nijinskaya and in Moscow for Goleizovsky, dancer and acrobatic gymnast for whose shows she created in 1922 and 1923linear constructions of unprecedented audacity. The oblique spacing of platforms and ladders soaring in Goleizovsky\u2019s purely rhythmic (abstract) shows impressed her contemporaries as much as the virtuosity of vertical platforms in the earlier staging of Romeo and Juliet. Ten years later, Tairoff recalled this innovation and asserted that \u201cinspired by her cubist experience\u201d Exter had \u201cinvented the vertical stage\u201d as early as 1921.<\/p>\n<p>Exter\u2019s revolutionary theatre work based on her novel method of dematerialising the decor was described by Simon Lissum in 1931 in the following terms: \u201cIt is light that forms everything at once: the volumes, the costumes, and so on are all light values\u201d. Just as abstract art had eliminated the reference to the extra-pictorial object, Alexandra Exter, the Columbus of modern decor, eliminated sets painted on canvas and replaced them with pure light to create so very powerful immaterial decor.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_50703\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-50703\" style=\"width: 1024px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-9\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-52322 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-1024x531.jpg\" alt=\"D\u00e9cors de th\u00e9atre\" width=\"1024\" height=\"531\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-1024x531.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-300x156.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-768x398.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-1536x796.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917-600x311.jpg 600w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-decors-1917.jpg 2000w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-50703\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">D\u00e9cors de th\u00e9atre, 1917<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Shown in 1924 in Vienna at the New Theatrical Techniques exhibition, her sets and costumes established her international reputation from one day to the next. The European tour of Tairoff\u2019s Chamber Theatre (Berlin and Paris in 1923) had already prepared the ground. When she arrived in Paris at the beginning of 1925, she was immediately invited by Fernand L\u00e9ger to join his Modern Academy where she taught stage design (abstract painting aroused less interest at the time). From then on Exter worked mainly in the field of the performing arts, in France, Italy and England where she designed the costumes and some ballet decors, including Nijinskaja\u2019s.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Aelita-01.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-10\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright wp-image-52323 size-intermediaire\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Aelita-01-402x600.jpg\" alt=\"Projet pour Aelita\" width=\"402\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Aelita-01-402x600.jpg 402w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Aelita-01-201x300.jpg 201w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-Aelita-01.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 402px) 100vw, 402px\" \/><\/a>Her costumes for the science fiction film Aelita (1924) were exhibited in Venice in 1924 and in Paris in 1925, where they met with undeniable success. Echoes of these designs can be found in films such as Fritz Lang\u2019s Metropolis. In 1927, she was commissioned to produce a large series of puppets that she exhibited in Magdeburg in 1929 and in Berlin in 1931 (Flechthe\u00efm Gallery). Constructed from an eclectic mix of materials, like Tatlin\u2019s reliefs or Schwitters Dadaist assemblages, these puppets (marionettes) evinced the richness of an artistic fantasy world that was to re-emerge half a century later in the unbridled freedom of American pop art and in French New Realism.<\/p>\n<p>Exter\u2019s theatre work culminated in 1930 in the publication by the Galerie des 4 Chemins in Paris of an album of fifteen stencils, with a preface by Alexandre Tairoff. It was the occasion of her first one-woman show in Paris of stage sets and costumes at the gallery. At the same time, she took part in the abstract Cercle and Carr\u00e9 exhibition and journal that established abstraction once and for all as a respectable art form in Europe. Exter\u2019s theatre work also crossed the Atlantic and was featured at the International Theatre exhibition in New York and the following year in the famous Machine Age Exhibition mounted by Alfred Barr at the new Museum of Modern Art in New York. The same year, Exter had an exhibition at Herwarth Walden\u2019s Der Sturm gallery in Berlin, a show entirely devoted to her theatre work. It seemed as if her painting was already irremediably relegated to oblivion.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-marionnette-01.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-11\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-52324 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-marionnette-01-207x300.jpg\" alt=\"Marionnette\" width=\"207\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-marionnette-01-207x300.jpg 207w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-marionnette-01-415x600.jpg 415w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-marionnette-01.jpg 691w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 207px) 100vw, 207px\" \/><\/a>Her constructivist puppets met with unquestionable success. Louis Lozowick, author of the first American book commissioned by Katherine Dreier\u2019s Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 Anonyme and dedicated to new Russian art, published an article in 1928 on her marionettes. In 1934, Alfred Barr included new works by Exter in his International Exhibit of Theatre Art. Two years later, she was among the artists features in the now historical Cubism and Abstract Art show, also mounted by Barr in New York. Her name was thus definitively etched into the history of modern art alongside Malewicz, Lissitzky, Rodchenko and Mondrian, among others.<\/p>\n<p>A year later, her Slovakian student Ester \u0160imerova successfully put together a big solo exhibition of Exter\u2019s work, subtitled Divadlo (theatre). With 116 entries in the catalogue, this show at the Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague (Um\u011bleckopr\u016fmyslov\u00e9 museum) was the most extensive exhibition of the artist\u2019s theatre work ever organised. The costumes Exter designed for Aelita could hardly have been appreciated as much as in Prague, in the country where Karel Capek had coined in 1920 the productivist neologism \u201crobot\u201d destined to figure a new category in the repertoire of European culture. This exhibition, however, turned out to be the swansong of Czech modernity and of Exter\u2019s career. The invasion of Sudentenland by the Wehrmacht set in motion the sinister hecatomb of the Second World War, which began a few months later in early 1939.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-12\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-large wp-image-52325\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-1024x761.jpg\" alt=\"Illustration pour Callimaque\" width=\"1024\" height=\"761\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-1024x761.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-300x223.jpg 300w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-768x571.jpg 768w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-1536x1142.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6-600x446.jpg 600w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Callimaque-p6.jpg 2000w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/a>From this time on, the artist\u2019s creative work was limited to manuscript illustration. In 1933 Exter had already illustrated poems by Arthur Rimbaud and tales by Gide and Lydia Cabrera, and, in 1936, \u201cQuatrains\u201d of the Persian poet Omar Khayyam, but the bulk of her output in book illustration was produced during the difficult years between 1939 and 1942. The subjects depended on the commissions she received, but her particular interest in Greek poetry (Callimachus, Aeschylus, Sapho) is evidenced by the impressive quality of her pictorial output on such publications. Echoes of her abstract experience took her in these figurative illustrations to new visual heights. Bursts of colour and centrifugal arrangements, very often thrown onto oblique paths of great complexity, attest to the vivacity of her creativity even in these times of great personal difficulties. It is hard to imagine that works as fresh, bright and inventive as these were made during the war by an abandoned sick artist living in virtual poverty, as we can learn from her letters to Simon Lissim.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Nekrassov.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-13\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-medium wp-image-52326\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Nekrassov-190x300.jpg\" alt=\"George Nekrassov\" width=\"194\" height=\"300\"><\/a>Forgotten during the difficult post-war years, Exter died in Fontenay-aux-Roses in March 1949, two years after the death of her second husband, the actor George Nekrassov. It took several decades and relentless work on the part of Simon Lissim before this major \u0153uvre again attracted the attention it deserved and that had been hers for much of her career.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For Exter was in fact one of the first in a modernist movement marked by the emergence of abstract painting to benefit from quite a bit of attention. Witness the many Russian articles on her work published in the 1910s. The renowned art critic Jakob Tugendhold, an expert on modern French art, was the author of an illustrated monograph on Exter, published in 1922 in Berlin in four versions \u2013 Russian, German, English, and French \u2013 proof that the publisher saw the European, and even international, prospects of the artist. Fifty years went by before another monograph on Exter was published, fifty years that corresponded to the totalitarian interruption in a century that proved to be merciless with the Prometheuses of art.<\/p>\n<p>The first posthumous exhibition of the artist was held in Paris in 1972 and a second organised in Moscow in 1987, half a century after the last exhibition in her lifetime. The place that she deserves in the history of abstract painting remains to be asserted.<\/p>\n<p><em><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-projet-couv-Tugenhold-1922.jpg\" data-rel=\"lightbox-image-14\" data-rl_title=\"\" data-rl_caption=\"\" title=\"\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-intermediaire wp-image-52327 aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-projet-couv-Tugenhold-1922-461x600.jpg\" alt=\"Projet de couverture pour le livre de Jakov Tugendhold\" width=\"461\" height=\"600\" srcset=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-projet-couv-Tugenhold-1922-461x600.jpg 461w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-projet-couv-Tugenhold-1922-231x300.jpg 231w, https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/2\/2019\/11\/Exter-projet-couv-Tugenhold-1922.jpg 769w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 461px) 100vw, 461px\" \/><\/a>\u00a9 Andr\u00e9i Nakov, Paris, 2012<\/strong><br>Ce texte fait partie d&#8217;une notice, r\u00e9dig\u00e9e par Andr\u00e9i Nakov pour l<strong>&#8216;Encyclop\u00e9die de l&#8217;art moderne<\/strong>, ouvrage collectif en plusieurs volumes, \u00e0 paraitre en langue russe \u00e0 Moscou en 2013.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A painter of unquestionable originality and equally great constancy of creativity, Alexandra Exter is the artist to whom we owe the birth of constructivist painting in Russia. After a Cubist period in Paris between 1910 and 1912, Exter rapidly moved on to incorporate the principles of the Futurist dynamic into her work. Inspired by Malewicz\u2019s [&hellip;]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":52302,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_relevanssi_hide_post":"","_relevanssi_hide_content":"","_relevanssi_pin_for_all":"","_relevanssi_pin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_unpin_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_keywords":"","_relevanssi_related_include_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_exclude_ids":"","_relevanssi_related_no_append":"","_relevanssi_related_not_related":"","_relevanssi_related_posts":"","_relevanssi_noindex_reason":"","rs_blank_template":"","rs_page_bg_color":"","slide_template_v7":"","_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"","footnotes":""},"class_list":{"0":"post-51942","1":"page","2":"type-page","3":"status-publish","4":"has-post-thumbnail","6":"entry"},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Alexandra Exter (1882-1949) - Association Alexandra Exter<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/alexandra-exter.net\/en\/biography\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Alexandra Exter (1882-1949)\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A painter of unquestionable originality and equally great constancy of creativity, Alexandra Exter is the artist to whom we owe the birth of constructivist painting in Russia. After a Cubist period in Paris between 1910 and 1912, Exter rapidly moved on to incorporate the principles of the Futurist dynamic into her work. 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