Ir a la página principal de la fundación caja madridIr a la sección 5.1.Ir a la sección 5.2.Ir a la sección 5.3.Ir a la sección 5.4.
imagen transparente
Fabric sample, Alexandra Ekster THE ARTS OF EVERYDAY LIFE
This section looks at the interest which artists of the time showed in the decorative arts, applying avant-garde idioms to objects from daily life in their ceaseless quest to unite art and everyday life.

Alexandra Ekster
Fabric sample, c. 1920-1930
Cloth with mechanical printing. 34.5 x 22 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg
Fabric sample with wide border of multi-coloured triangles, Anonymous Anonymous
Fabric sample with wide border of multi-coloured triangles, c. 1928-1930
Cloth with mechanical printing. 25 x 72 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg
Handkerchief with coloured rays, Anonymous Anonymous
Handkerchief with coloured rays, c. 1928-1930
Cloth with mechanical printing. 73 x 78 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg
Tray Workers of the Word, Unite, Sophia Shulman Sophia Shulman
Tray Workers of the Word, Unite, 1925
Oil on panel. 57.5 x 57.5 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg
Tea Service with suprematist decoration, Nikolai Suetin Nikolai Suetin
Tea Service with suprematist decoration, 1923
Painted porcelain
Tray. 31 cm Ø
Tea-pot with a lid. 14.7 x 18 x 10.3 cm
Milk-can with a lid. 11.3 x 14 x 9.2 cm
Sugar-bowl with a lid. 10.7 x 14.7 x 9.5 cm
Cups. 6.6 x 8.6 x 6.4 cm; saucers. 14.4 cm Ø
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg