Worker - 1933


Size (cm): 60x75
Price:
Sale price3.013,00 NOK

Description

Kazimir Malevich, one of the greatest innovatives of abstract and visionary art of suprematism, presents us in his work * worker - 1933 * A painting that, at first glance, might seem a simple portrait, but that in its essence, reveals a deep Reflection on the human condition and the ideology of his time.

He painting It represents a robust man, dressed in a red and blue shirt and a gray hat. The worker's face is delineated with marked features, suggesting a strong and determined figure. The colors used by Malevich are of great symbolic importance: the living red of the shirt can be interpreted as an allusion to the revolutionary fervor and socialism that dominated the Soviet Union in those years. This use of red, combined with blue and white shirt, could also reflect the internal struggle of the individual within a society that was going through huge transformations.

Malevich's technique in this work moves away from geometric purism from its suprematist stage, in which basic forms such as squares, circles and lines predominated without any reference to the physical world. On the other hand, * worker - 1933 * shows us his ability to integrate these abstract forms within the human context. Through the simplification of the lines and the use of flat colors, Malevich achieves a balance between abstraction and figuration, in a return to a language more accessible to common man.

This portrait, although figurative, does not completely abandon the influences of suprematism. The position of the worker, erect and frontal, recalls the stability and statism of suprematist forms, at the same time suggesting a deep connection with the universal and the human. However, the absence of a detailed background or additional contexts keeps the subject in a timeless and abstract area, highlighting its role as an icon beyond a specific individual.

In the historical context, * worker - 1933 * Born in a period of intense ideologization of art in the Soviet Union. At this time, art was expected to meet the guidelines of socialist realism, promoting proletarian ideology and class struggle. Malevich, who had already faced criticism and censorship for his abstract art, seems to find in this portrait a way of mediating between his own artistic language and the ideological demands of the regime. Although it does not fully adjust to socialist realism, the work maintains a clear focus on the figure of the worker, emblem of the new social order.

When contemplating *worker - 1933 *, one cannot avoid feeling that Malevich is proposing a synthesis between his personal search in the art and political reality that surrounds him. It is a robust work, both in its execution and in its symbolism, and a testimony of Malevich's ability to adapt and respond to the challenges of its time maintaining its artistic integrity.

In conclusion, * worker - 1933 * It is a masterful creation that encapsulates the tension between artistic individualism and political collectivism. Malevich, without giving up his aesthetic vision, offers us an image that remains relevant and challenging, always reminding us of the transforming power of art and its ability to dialogue with human experience in its multiple dimensions.

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