Illustration of 'Chad Gadya' - 1919


Size (cm): 60x75
Price:
Sale price£210 GBP

Description

The Lissitzky, a monumental figure of constructivism and suprematism, left an unmistakable and radical artistic legacy. His "illustration of 'Chad Gadya' - 1919" is a precious sample in the way his work flirted with the limits of representation and abstraction, challenging the conventional norms of the art of his time. This work, part of a series of illustrations for the Jewish popular story "Chad Gadya," translates into an innovative pictorial language the narrative elements of history.

The work immediately stands out for its bold use of color and shape. In the visual center, a male figure seems to be portrayed in an amalgam of geometry and surrealism. The primary colors dominate the chromatic palette: intense red, deep blue and yellow vibrant, all in perfect harmony and tension with a rigorous but dynamic geometry. There is a clear mastery of constructivism in the way Lissitzky organizes the visual elements: compositions divided by straight and angular lines, embodied with mathematical precision, which not only structure the work, but also give it a sense of rhythm and movement.

The challenge that Lissitzky proposes to the viewer is evident: it is not a conventional illustration that simply seeks to represent the story of the story "Chad Gadya". Rather, it is a visual re-interpretation that uses the universal language of suprematism, where black and white acts as a counterpoint to the primary colors mentioned before, creating depth planes and a constant visual tension. The figure of the God in the upper right, with his face marked by a enduring grimace, seems an almost caricaturesca representation, strongly planted in the ideology of folklore and the Jewish tradition, but reinterpreted with the unmistakable seal of the European avant -garde.

The central figure could also be interpreted as a synthesis of sacrifice and persecution, recurring themes in the iconography of the story, and even more relevant given the historical context of the Jewish people in the turbulent times of the twentieth century. Lissitzky not only strengthens in the field of visual art, but rather crosses the viewer a complex narrative that goes from the particular to the universal.

Likewise, the negative space, something characteristic of suprematist language, plays a crucial role: the juxtaposition of empty and full forms not only creates a visual dynamism but also invites the viewer to reflect on silences and omissions, about what is not said but it is implicit in the conformation of the visual structure. In this way, Lissitzky seems to establish a subtle but deep dialogue between the visible and the invisible, between what was said and the quiet.

The influence of contemporary artists and contemporary movements such as Malevich's Cubism or Gropius's Bauhaus is felt in this work without losing its uniqueness. Lissitzky achieves a balance between tribute and originality, between tradition and rupture, placing itself as an unquestionable pioneer in the construction of a new artistic paradigm.

"Illustration of 'Chad Gadya' - 1919" is not just a work of art, it is a manifestation of Lissitzky's ability to amplify the horizons of graphic art, reinventing and expanding a traditional story in ways that unify various disciplines and that, inevitably , rethink the way in which the viewer is related to art. In this sense, painting does not represent only a religious narrative, but a visual manifesto of the encounter between the old tradition and radical modernity.

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