Aleksei Kruchenykh | MoMA
Aleksei Kruchenykh. Vselenskaia voina (Universal War). 1916. Illustrated book with 12 collages, page (each): dimensions vary; overall (closed): 8 15/16 x 12 13/16 x 1/16" (22.7 x 32.5 x 0.1 cm). Gift of The Judith Rothschild Foundation

“In our art, we already have the first experiments of the language of the future.”

Aleksei Kruchenykh

The poet and artist Aleksei Kruchenykh is best known as one of the most dedicated and radical proponents of Russian Futurism. In A Slap in the Face of Public Taste, a manifesto issued in 1912, he and his co-authors called for the inauguration of a new artistic language: “Throw Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, et al., et al., overboard from the Ship of Modernity,” they declared. “We alone are the face of our Time.”1 Perhaps more than any other figure in the Futurist group, Kruchenykh fully committed himself to the renunciation of the prevailing artistic and literary canon. His innovative books synthesize nontraditional poetry composed of nonsensical words with abstract imagery often contributed by other artists, including Mikhail Larionov, Natalia Goncharova, and Kazimir Malevich. In these books, Kruchenykh intentionally incorporated misprints, deletions, errors, and even blank pages, seeking to convey the disorder and irrationality of a world marked by rapid social transformation and technological innovation.

Born in 1886 to a family of peasants in the Kherson region of present-day Ukraine, Kruchenykh trained in the graphic arts at the Odessa Art School before becoming a high school art teacher. He later abandoned his teaching career to dedicate himself to poetry, moving to Moscow in 1907 to join a circle of avant-garde writers and artists. It was shortly thereafter that he helped pen A Slap in the Face with David Burliuk, Vladimir Mayakovsky, and Velimir Khlebnikov. The collaborative impulse implicit in this effort underpins much of Kruchenykh’s artistic output.

In 1913, he staged the opera Victory over the Sun, in which performers held a symbolic funeral for the sun to signify the triumph of a new aesthetic over obsolete artistic traditions. Mikhail Matiushin contributed the music, and Malevich designed the costumes and sets, including a curtain that featured his earliest exploration of the square. Kruchenykh’s prose for the opera, written in a fragmented, nonlinear style known as zaum, scandalized audiences and critics alike. Invented by Kruchenykh with fellow poet Khlebnikov, zaum is usually translated as “beyonsense” or “transrational.” With nonsensical units of sound and unorthodox rhythms of speech, zaum defamiliarizes language and evades logic in order to produce new, unexpected meanings.

One of Kruchenykh’s best known works of zaum is the book Universal War, which he made in response to the chaos and destruction of World War I. Kruchenyhk wrote the book’s 12 short poems and created the accompanying collages, which he composed from irregular geometric shapes that he cut out of colored paper. While no apparent relationship may be drawn between the disjointed letters and words of the poems and Kruchenyk’s crude, abstract collages, both texts and images suggest the absurdity of war through their very unintelligibility. Universal War operates as an explicit denunciation of this historic catastrophe, while also exemplifying the ways by which Kruchenykh sought to challenge traditional conceptions of books as cohesive conveyors of information.

Kruchenykh would continue to produce artist’s books throughout the 1920s. Later, he created memoirs and small monographs on his Futurist friends. While modest in appearance and printed either by hand using carbon paper or with simple lithography, these works demonstrate Kruchenykh’s novel and highly personal approach to illustrated book production. “Let a book be small,” he mused, “but contain no lie—everything the writer’s own, to the last ink blot.”2

Kiko Aebi, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and Prints, 2022

Opening quote is from Aleksei Kruchenykh, “New Ways of the Word (the language of the future, death to Symbolism),” in Russian Futurism through its Manifestoes, 1912–1928, ed. Anna Lawton (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1988), 70.

  1. A Slap in the Face of Public Taste (Moscow, 1912).

  2. Kurchenykh quoted in Vladimir Markov, Russian Futurism (London: Macgibbon & Kee Limited, 1968), 129.

Wikipedia entry
Introduction
Aleksei Yeliseyevich Kruchyonykh (Russian: Алексе́й Елисе́евич Кручёных; 9 February 1886 – 17 June 1968) was a Russian poet, artist, and theorist, perhaps one of the most radical poets of Russian Futurism, a movement that included Vladimir Mayakovsky, David Burliuk and others. Born in 1886, he lived in the time of the Russian Silver Age of literature, and together with Velimir Khlebnikov, another Russian Futurist, Kruchenykh is considered the inventor of zaum, a poetry style utilising nonsense words. Kruchonykh wrote the libretto for the Futurist opera Victory Over the Sun, with sets provided by Kazimir Malevich. In 1912, he wrote the poem Dyr bul shchyl; four years later, in 1916, he created his most famous book, Universal War. He is also known for his Declaration of the Word as Such (1913): "The worn-out, violated word "lily" is devoid of all expression. Therefore I call the lily éuy – and original purity is restored."
Wikidata
Q721962
Information from Wikipedia, made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License
Getty record
Introduction
Graduated from the Odessa School of Art, 1906. Studied painting independently and taught graphic art in secondary schools.
Nationalities
Russian, Ukrainian
Gender
Male
Roles
Artist, Teacher, Publicist, Critic, Poet, Collagist, Graphic Artist, Illustrator, Painter
Names
Aleksey Kruchonykh, Aleksei Kruchenykh, Alexei Kruchenykh, Aleksey Yeliseyevich Kruchonykh, A. Kruchenykh, Alexeï Kroutchenykh, A. Kroutchonykh, Aleksej Kručënych, A. Kruchenych, Alekseĭ Eliseevich Kruchenykh, Aleksei Eliseevich Kruchonykh, Alexey Eliseyevich Kruchonykh, Alexey Yeliseyevich Kruchyonykh, Alexis Krutchonykh, А. Крученых, Алексей Елисеевич Крученых, Alekseĭ Kruchenych, Alekseĭ Kruchenykh, Алексей Крученых, Aleksej Eliseevich Kruchenykh, Aleksej Eliseevic Krucenych, Aleksander Kruchenykh, Aleksej Eliseevič Kručenych
Ulan
500202621
Information from Getty’s Union List of Artist Names ® (ULAN), made available under the ODC Attribution License

Works

73 works online

Exhibitions

Publication

  • Inventing Abstraction, 1910-1925: How a Radical Idea Changed Modern Art Exhibition catalogue, Hardcover, 376 pages
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