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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 |
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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 |
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Anonymous Handkerchief with coloured rays, c. 1928-1930 Cloth with mechanical printing. 73 x 78 cm State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg |
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Sophia Shulman Tray Workers of the Word, Unite, 1925 Oil on panel. 57.5 x 57.5 cm State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg |
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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 |