Cubo-Futurism


Kazimir Malévich, The Knife Mill (Principle of Glittering), 1913, oil on canvas, 79.5 x 79.5 cm, Yale University Art Gallery

Cubofuturismo was the main school of painting and sculpture practiced by Russian Futurism.

When Aristarj Lentulov (Aristarkh Lentulov) returned from Paris in 1913 and exhibited his works in Moscow, Russian Futurist painters adopted the forms of Cubism and combined it with Italian Futurism movement representation. Kazimir Malévich developed the style, which can be seen in his El Molinillo de Cuchillo (signed 1912, painted 1913), although he later abandoned it for Suprematismo.

Followers of the movement included

Futuristic cube sculptors including Iosif Chaikov, Boris Koroliov and Vera Mújina, all teaching at the Soviet State Art School in Moscow, Vjutemás. and

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