Аннотации:
У дисертації досліджено історію формування спільноти Асоціації
революційного мистецтва України (АРМУ) в Київському художньому інституті
(КХІ) та її вплив на розвиток живопису українського модернізму.
Було проаналізовано: історичні обставини становлення українського
модернізму з 1917 по 1932 рр.; творчі принципи провідних живописців АРМУ в
КХІ; боротьбу радянської влади з формалізмом і репресії проти української
творчої інтелігенції. Виявлено, що АРМУ була заснована в короткий період
часткової лібералізації суспільного життя в УСРР епохи НЕП і українізації,
який у 1930-ті рр. був згорнутий сталінськими репресіями. АРМУ стала
найбільшим мистецьким об’єднанням українського модернізму, в формуванні
якого ключове значення мали ректор і професори КХІ. На основі матеріалів
архівних фондів уточнено факти з історії УАМ, КХІ, АРМУ і біографій їхніх
діячів. Виявлено, що серед членів АРМУ в КХІ на розвиток живопису
українського модернізму найбільший вплив мали творчі принципи
О. Богомазова, М. Бойчука, П. Голуб’ятникова та В. Пальмова.
The dissertation explores the community of the Association of Revolutionary Art
of Ukraine (Аsotsiatsia revolutsyinoho mystetstva Ukrainy, or ARMU) at the Kyiv Art Institute, the stages of its formation and its historical influence on painting of
Ukrainian modernism.
The study analyzes the historical circumstances of formation of modernis m in
Ukraine since the February Revolution and until the collapse of the NEP . Also studied
are the creative principles of leading ARMU painters in the Kyiv Art Institute, the
struggle of the Soviet government against formalism and repressions against the
Ukrainian creative intelligentsia in the 1930s.
It was revealed that ARMU was founded during a short period of partial
liberalization of public life in the Ukrainian SSR during the NEP and Ukrainization
era, which was cut short by Stalin’ s repressions in the 1930s. During this period, the
ARMU became the largest artistic association of Ukrainian modernism, founded
directly by the rector and professors of Kyiv Art Institute. In their activities, the
leaders of the ARMU strive to intensify the artistic life of the Ukrainian SSR, protect
it from the influence of the Russian art associations and to establish ties with
European cultural and educational institutions. This ideological position, which
combined a pro-European orientation with the desire for an anti-colonial revival of
national culture, united many intellectuals in the Ukrainian SSR during the 1920s,
most of whom were later repressed or physically exterminated by the USSR punitive
authorities. Among the members of the ARMU, M. Boychuk and some of his
followers were executed. The range of artistic pursuits of ARMU artists who taught at
the Kyiv Art Institute varied from different movements of modernism to experiments
with neo-primitivism. It was discovered that some of the artists, especially
O. Bogomazov, M. Boychuk, P. Golubyatnikov, and V. Palmov , had a significant
influence on the painting of Ukrainian modernism. Their common feature was the
desire to create images rather inspired by artistic imagination, than by copying from
nature that was required by socialist realism. To achieve this goal, each of them
employed his own method: M. Boychuk used the method of compositional analysis
of works of different eras and cultures, P. Golubyatnikov created a fantastic
perspective in his paintings and enhanced color contrasts, O. Bogomazov
experimentally developed his theory of visual perception of colors and shapes on a
picture plane, and V. Palmov practiced expressive, unplanned improvisation. Despite
the fact that their creative principles were quite different, the younger generations of
artists actively synthesized them in search of their individual style. This is clearly
evidenced by catalogs and reviews of all-Ukraine exhibitions held in Kyiv, Kharkiv,
Odesa, and Dnipropetrovsk. The members of the ARMU among the professors of the
Kyiv Art Institute in different periods were: B. Kratko, V. Meller, Ye. Sagaidachny,
A. Taran, V. Tatlin and others. In accordance with the orientation of the ARMU on the
concept of industrial art, in addition to easel painting, its exhibitions included
separate sections of graphics, sculpture, ceramics, theater design, architecture,
photography, etc.
The author of the dissertation analyzed and for the first time published selected
visual instructions, sketches, notes of O. Bogomazov from the Central State Archive
Museum of Literature and Arts of Ukraine, revealed the identities of some previously
undiscovered Bogomazov’s students in the Kyiv Art Institute. The exploration of several works of the 1920s and early 1930s from the National Academy of Fine Arts
and Architecture Archives, made under the influence of ARMU members in the Kyiv
Art Institute, allowed to clarify their attribution. Some publications in the 1910s–
1920s periodicals, which were not previously involved in the study of Ukrainian
Academy of Arts, Kyiv Art Institute, ARMU and their figures, are considered. In
particular, statements about foundation of the ARMU made by I. Vrona and
P. Gorbenko in the rare newspaper articles of 1925, are quoted.