In-venue in Winchester and online via Zoom
With Dr Rosamund Bartlett

In-venue in Winchester and online via Zoom
With Dr Rosamund Bartlett
From the Red Corner to the Green Stripe: The Colours of Ukrainian and Russian Art with Dr Rosamund Bartlett
Overview:
This day of lectures will explore the kaleidoscope of colours in Ukrainian and Russian painting, music and applied arts. There will be a particular focus on Modernist experimentation, on Kandinsky's investigation of colour and form in The Blue Rider, for example, Sonia Delaunay's evolving use of colour as rhythm and structure, and Malevich's "New Painterly Realism of Colour". We will also discuss the sacred significance of red in icons, Moscow's polychrome majolica, Scriabin's synaesthesia, and the fusing of invention with traditional decorative motifs which inspired the bright palette in Maria Prymachenko's paintings.
1. Red Squares, Red Icons and Moscow Majolica
An investigation of the significance and use of red, including discussion of how Red Square and the "red corner" acquired their names, the predominance of red in Novgorod and Moscow icons, and the distinct tradition of Ukrainian "red icons". We will also look at the 17th century craze in Russia for polychrome majolica tiles, which soon covered entire walls of monasteries and churches, including St. Basil's, and how that tradition was revived in the early 20th century by Savva Mamontov, who used irridescent Art Nouveau architectural ceramics to transform the facade of the new Metropole Hotel.
2. Kandinsky and The Blue Rider
Kandinsky went to study art in Munich at the age of thirty, after training as a lawyer and undertaking an ethnographic expedition to a remote part of northern Russia. By 1910 he had graduated from Art Nouveau to Expressionism and was creating innovative theatrical works combining colour, sound, language and movement. This lecture explores the path-breaking work of the international avant-garde group "The Blue Rider" he founded with Franz Marc in 1911. Joined by leading modernists such as Paul Klee, August Macke and Gabriele Münter, the group sought through experiments with colour and form to explore spiritual questions relating to all the arts.
3. Colour in the Ukrainian and Russian Avant-Garde
With reference to native traditions exemplified by the folk painters Hanna Sobachko-Shostak and Maria Prymachenko, and tracing a line from the early to the late 20th century, we will first seek to identify a "Ukrainian palette" in Sonia Delaunay's use of colour as rhythm and structure, Alexandra Exter's abstract colour experiments, and Oleksandr Bohomazov's vibrant canvases. We will then turn to the Russian avant-garde to explore Scriabin's synaesthetic associations of colour with music, Malevich's "New Painterly Realism of Colour", Olga Rozanova's abstract "colour-paintings" and the radical theory of "expanded vision" developed by the painter and composer Mikhail Matyushkin, beginning with his involvement with the 1913 Futurist opera Victory over the Sun and culminating in his 1932 Colour Manual.
You can book for the whole course or just individual days.
Bookings will open shortly.
Price: £35 per day in venue, to include coffee/tea, light lunch with wine or soft drinks; £15 per session for online attendees.
This year we are offering a reduced total fee of £165 and £70 for in-venue and online tickets respectively when you select all 5 days as a bundle. Please see the Ticket Tailor box office for further details.
For more information go to: https://theartssocietyhantsiowarea.org.uk/Special/Special.aspx
Tickets: https://buytickets.at/theartssocietyhampshireandisleofwightarea
Contact the organiser if required at: hampshireisleofwightarea@theartssociety.org
Rosamund Bartlett a writer, lecturer and translator whose work as a cultural historian ranges across the arts. She completed her doctorate at Oxford and is the author of several books, including biographies of Chekhov and Tolstoy, and a study of Wagner's influence in Russia. She is currently writing a history of the Russian avant-garde. Her new translation of Anna Karenina for Oxford World’s Classics was published to acclaim in 2014. She has written on art, music and literature for publications such as The Daily Telegraph and Apollo, and received commissions from institutions including the Royal Opera House, Tate UK, and the Salzburg Festival. Her lecturing work has taken her from the V&A and the National Theatre in London to the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, and she contributes regularly to Proms events and opera broadcasts on the BBC.