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Lidiya Masterkova

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In the early 1970s, these dark, brooding forms were still in evidence, but superimposed by collages of white circles bearing the numerals 0, 1, and 9. She also created subtle, circular, black and white compositions by manipulating India ink or watercolor on wet paper, often affixing collage elements
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One of the significant personalities in the Moscow art world of the 1960s, Masterkova's work at the beginning of that decade included loosely painted watercolors in bright colors. Soon after, she darkened her palette and in the mid 1960s, her work was characterized by abstract compositions created
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with a palette knife in which dark, craggy forms contrasted with a light background. By the end of the decade, she began incorporating lace and brocade collected from abandoned churches into her compositions. She felt these items were filled with a kind of mysticism.
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Lydia Masterkova tended to work in cycles and series, the most famous of which is "Planets" (1976). Her work resides in numerous museums and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the
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During this period, Masterkova contributed to apartment exhibitions in Russia, foreign exhibitions, and the first shows of nonconformist art, including the first autumnal review, "In the open air" ("
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Encyclopedia of Contemporary Russian Culture (Encyclopedias of Contemporary Culture)
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Kolodzei Collection of Russian and Eastern European Art, Kolodzei Art Foundation
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T. Smorodinskaya (Editor), K. Evans-Romaine (Editor), H. Goscilo (Editor).
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Thames and Hudson/The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers, 1995.
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From Gulag to Glasnost : Nonconformist Art from the Soviet Union.
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in Moscow, which held a retrospective of her work in 2006.
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Mimi Ferzt Gallery, New York, 2001. Exhibition catalogue.
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at the Moscow Secondary School of Art (1943–46), the
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She died in 2008 at the age of 81 and was buried in
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Painting
Abstract Expressionism
Russian
Moscow
USSR
France
Lianozovo Group
Oscar Rabin
Abstract Expressionism
Mikhail Perutski
Vasily Surikov
Moscow Regional School of Art
Lianozovo Group
Vladimir Nemukhin
Bulldozer Exhibition
Dina Vierny

Zimmerli Art Museum

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