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Author: Dlugi V.
Year – Last quarter of the twentieth century. Size – 59x44. Technique Cardboard, oil. Description: The work comes from the collection of Lily Bronstein.
Author: Tryamkin V.N.
Year – 2008 Size – 48x63. Technique Paper, see technique.
Author: Vakhtangov E.S.
Year – 2003 Size – 24x16. Technique Oil on canvas.
Author: Konysheva N.I.
Year – 1993 Size – 88.5x141.5. Technique Oil on canvas.
Year – 1983 Size – 59.5x50. Technique Hardboard, see technology. Description: Signed and dated lower right.
Author: Groman D.S.
Year – 1979 Size – 58x89.5. Technique Cardboard, oil.
Author: Albert Yu.F.
Year – 2010 Size – 60x50. Technique Canvas, acrylic. Description: Signature and date below.
Author: Kabakov I.I.
Year – 1976 Size – 48x72. Technique Paper, color pencils, ink. Description: Signed and dated lower right. Sold.
Author: Vrubel D.V.
Year – 1981 Size – 100x70. Technique Hardboard, oil. Description: Monogram bottom left.
Author: Povzner L.A.
Year – 1980s Size – 73x50. Technique Paper, gouache.
Year – 1963 Size – 69.5x49.5. Technique Cardboard, oil.
Year – 1980s Size – 50x70. Technique Paper, watercolor, gouache. Description: Signed lower right.
Author: Komar V.A.
Year – 1964 Size – 45x40. Technique Oil on canvas. Description: Sold.
Author: Melamid A.D.
Year – 1968 Size – 35x50. Technique Cardboard, oil. Description: Sold.
Author: Bukingolts A.E.
Year – 1999 Size – 51x67. Technique Oil on canvas.
Author: Bunin P.L.
Year – 1978. Size – 43х61,5. Technique Mixed media on paper. Description: Monogrammed and dated lower right.
Author: Leonov P.P.
Size – 33x49. Technique Cardboard, oil.
Author: Novikov I.A.
Year – 2018 Size – 80x100. Technique Oil on canvas.
Author: El-Safadi L.V.
Year – 1994 Size – 80x95. Technique Oil on canvas. Description: Signed lower right. From the artist's collection.
Year – 1984 Size – 54x56. Technique Oil on canvas.
Author: Makarevich I.G.
Year – 1991 Size – 75x54. Technique Color lithograph, paper.
Author: Chubarov E.I.
Year – 1981 Size – 37x51. Technique Paper ink Description: Examination of the State Tretyakov Gallery. Signature and date at bottom center.
Year – 1992 Size – 60x50 Technique Cardboard, oil.
Year – 1970s Size – 25x40. Technique Paper, ink.
Size – 80x70. Technique Cardboard, oil. Description: Monogram bottom right.
Author: Shemyakin M.M.
Year – 1972 Size – 26x25. Technique Paper, ink.
Author: Kropivnitsky E.L.
Year – 1970 Size – 23.7x31.4. Technique Paper, mixed media.
Author: Bulatov E.V.
Year – 1989 Size – 17x34.5. Technique Paper, color pencils. Description: Signature and date at the bottom right. Similar works were published in the catalog of the exhibition "Eric Bulatov", Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, 2006, p. 181.
Author: Morev A.N.
Year – 1992 Size – 63x71. Technique Oil on canvas.
Author: Amaspyur E.A.
Year – 1976 Size – 85x85. Technique Oil on canvas. Description: Signed lower right.
Nonconformism means unofficial Soviet art. The name Soviet nonconformism serves to jointly denote the representatives of various artistic schools of 1950—1980s which for reasons of political and ideological censure were pushed out of the public artistic life. At this time, the visual arts in USSR became separated into conformism and nonconformism. The terms conformism and nonconformism were borrowed from psychology to designate passive and remonstrative acceptance of the existing system. Nonconformism in Soviet art reflected the existing psychological and social situation. The example of nonconformism in the life of Soviet people showed that sustained pressure of the totalitarian oppression was impossible. In search of new reality, the visual arts were boldly overcoming the obstacles of the past canons. In the field of unofficial arts of the Soviet Union the laws for state regulation of the art process could not operate. The development of the art was left to its own laws. Many view nonconformism as a whole as an “insane mixture of Russophiles and Westernists, the salon and the deep thinking of artists working in most diverse manners who were brought together through being on the same side of the fence”.
The nonconformism is acknowledged as a unique phenomenon in the history of visual arts; many specimens of “unofficial art” became a part of the collections and displays of the State Tretiakov Gallery, the Russian Museum, the Moscow Museum of Modern Art and many others.
Buy nonconformist art works. Sell nonconformist art works. These are very popular requests that we receive at out site. Our gallery purchases collections of paintings and graphics of the 20th century and important works of nonconformist artists. About 300 outstanding works of different authors are represented in the funds of our gallery. They are gathered in the collection of Nonconformist artists.
Soviet nonconformist art includes several informal groups, such as “Lianozovo group” (Oscar Rabin, Nikolai Vechtomov, Lidia Masterkova, Vladimir Nemukhin, Lev Kropivnitsky), “Moscow conceptualists” (Ilya Kabakov, Andrei Monastyrsky and artistic group “Collective actions”, Erik Bulatov, Dmitry Prigov, Viktor Pivovarov, Pavel Pepperstein, Nikita Alekseiev and others, “Gnezdo” group), “Sots Art” (Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid), “Mitki”.
Buy nonconformist art works. You can buy the works of these and other Soviet unofficial artists in our gallery.
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