Aleksandr Mikhailovich Rodchenko (Alexander Rodchenko) was born on
December 5, 1891, in St. Petersburg, Russia. His father, named Mikhail
Mikhailovich Rodchenko, was a theatre designer. His mother, named Olga
Evdokimovna, was a laundress. From 1908-1910 Rodchenko was a dental
technician at Dental School of Dr. Natanson. From 1910-1914 he studied
art at the Kazan School of Art under Nikolai Fechin, then at the
Stroganov Art Institute in Moscow.
Rodchenko experienced the influence of Kazimir Malevich, Vladimir
Tatlin,
Wassily Kandinsky, and other artists working in abstract style. He was
the pupil and assistant of Vladimir Tatlin, and his work was initially
influenced by Cubism, then Cubo-Futurism. His early drawings and
paintings followed the developments of Suprematism and Futurism. He
worked with a wide variety of media as a decorator, furniture and
theatre designer, printer, painter, sculptor, and photographer. After
the Russian Revolution of 1917, Rodchenko joined the Bolsheviks. He
believed in new opportunities for art and became active in many
applications of art, illustration, commercial designs, and photography.
In 1921 Rodchenko replaced
Wassily Kandinsky as Chairman of State Institute of
Artistic Culture (INKHUK) and Chairman of Museum Bureau and Russian
State Art Acquisitions Commission. In 1921 he co-wrote the
Constructivist's Manifesto. He collaborated with writer and actor
Vladimir Mayakovsky, director
Vsevolod Meyerhold, composer
Dmitri Shostakovich, filmmaker
Dziga Vertov, and
many others. From 1923-1928 he collaborated with
Osip Brik in the Left
Front of Art (LEF). In 1925 Rodchenko won four silver medals at Paris
International Exhibition.
Alexander Rodchenko became one of the founders of Constructivism and
Productivism in Russia. His innovations revolutionized the art of still
photography. He used his camera as if it was a drawing instrument. He
mastered the use of photo-montage, odd angles, wide frames, and
photo-series. His way of photographing from unusual and obscured
viewpoints, exploring the potential of shadows, opened new dimensions
in photo-art. Rodchenko shot his subjects from high above or below
angles, to shock the viewer and to postpone recognition. He made
important photo-portraits of actress
Lilya Brik, writer
Osip Brik, actor
Vladimir Mayakovsky, director
Vsevolod Meyerhold, director
Dziga Vertov, director
Aleksandr Dovzhenko, and
other Russian culture luminaries. He also organized many photography
exhibitions. Rodchenko was the art director in several Soviet-made
films. His most innovative and interesting work was his graphic design
and montage works for advertisements and movie posters, which was his
major contribution to film-poster art. His posters for such films as
'Battleship Potemkin' (1925), 'Kinoglaz' (1924), and other works, are
regarded among the highest achievements in film-poster art.
In 1928 Rodchenko wrote a manifesto titled "Against the Synthaetic
Portrait, For the Snapshot" in which he argues for the documentary
objectivity of photography. "Snapshots allow no one to idealize or
falsify Lenin", wrote Rodchenko. He was soon attacked by Stalinists and
was accused of supporting Trotsky and his ideas. His exhibitions were
canceled, he was dismissed from major projects and jobs. For many years
he was deprived of livelihood. That caused him a depression, high blood
pressure, and other health problems. Rodchenko was officially charged
with "bourgeois formalism" and his photography was censored and banned
from public shows. However, from 1934-1938, he was commissioned to make
several photo-albums for Soviet propaganda, such as: "Belomor-kanal
imeni Stalina" and "Krasnaya Armia" (Red Army 1938). Rodchenko made a
beatiful job, but remained under suspicion during many years of the
dictatorship of
Joseph Stalin.
Alexander Rodchenko was in opposition to Socialist realism. From the
late 1930's to the end of his life he was forced to quit photography
amidst the paranoia of Stalinist censorship. He returned to painting
sporadically after 1942, made a series of abstract decorative
compositions, but his art was ostracized. He lived in poverty and
obscurity for the last twenty years of his life. Rodchenko was
constantly harassed by officials for his art, his membership in the
Union of Soviet Artists was canceled, and he was made an outcast. His
membership was restored only in 1954, after the death of Stalin.
Rodchenko died of a stroke on December 3, 1956, in Moscow, and was laid
to rest in Donskoe Cemetery in Moscow, Russia.