Lot 117
  • 117

Nikolai Stepanovich Troshin

Estimate
1,200 - 1,800 GBP
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Description

  • Nikolai Stepanovich Troshin
  • Illustration for Khlebozavod No.3
  • gouache over pencil on card
  • 35.5 by 26cm, 14 by 10 1/4 in.
  • Executed in 1930

Catalogue Note

Troshin and his wife Olga Deineko wrote and illustrated a number of educational children's books in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Books such as Khlebozavod No.3, How Cotton Becomes Calico and From Rubber to Galoshes each told the story of the industrial processes which turned various raw materials into their finished product, celebrating the technological achievements of the Soviet Union.

The Soviet art critic and dealer Victor Kholodkov (1948-2015) was particularly drawn to the graphic works and typographical experiments of the Russian avant-garde. He published a number of articles on the subject and contributed to exhibitions after his emigration from the Soviet Union in 1989, including the 1992 Guggenheim exhibition The Great Utopia: The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde. His extensive collection of papers and artwork relating to VKhUTEMAS was acquired by the Getty Museum in 1995 and his collection of Soviet music sheet covers is now in The Library of Congress.

The present selection of graphic works, oils and original film posters (lots 107-138) from the first half of the 20th century is characteristic of Kholodkov’s interests in the convergence of artistic, cultural and political concerns of the period. He is known to have purchased much of his collection directly from the artists or their families; others were acquired directly from Nikolai Khardzhiev, another well-known collector of the Russian avant-garde.