Rayonism

Rayonism (sometimes also written Rayonnismus ) is a style of painting of the Russian avant-garde.

The Rayonism is mainly due to the Russian artist Mikhail Fedorovich Larionov. He published, influenced by the Futurist Manifesto (1909 ) by the Italian theorist Marinetti, 1913, the " Manifesto of the Rayonism ". In this he demanded in analogy to the special theory of relativity, Albert Einstein, the representation of the fourth dimension of the light. Furthermore, the Cubism for the development of Rayonism was significant. Larionov 1910-1914 experimented with light beams and disassembled objects in ink jet compositions in order to represent energy and to develop a sense of the fourth dimension. Together with Natalia Goncharova, his girlfriend and later wife, he painted pictures by transforming objects into abstract ray diagrams.

The Rayonisten are also called " Lutschisten " of russian lollies ( beam ). The arrangement of all the pixels in parallel, overlapping beam -like color fields, the splinter is facet- like beam of light was given the name " Luminarismus ".

The concept of Rayonism put the two artists to stage decorations for the Paris Theater, where moving light was used.

List of artists of Rayonism

  • Natalija Goncharova (1881-1962), Russian painter
  • Mikhail Larionov (1881-1964), Russian painter
  • David Burliuk (1882-1967), Russian -American painter
  • Vladimir Burliuk (1886-1917), Russian- Ukrainian painter, brother of the foregoing,
  • Mikhail Le - Dantiu (1891-1917)
  • Modern Art
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