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Wooden puzzle "Pylyari. Oleksandr Bogomazov"
Number of elements: 300
Puzzle size: 360 x 320 mm
Box size: 260×160×55 mm
Material: wood (HDF)
Olexandr Bogomazov (March 26, 1880 - June 3, 1930) is one of the most innovative artists of the Ukrainian and world avant-garde. He was not only an outstanding painter, but also a profound theorist of art, whose ideas were years ahead of his time. In 1914, he wrote his fundamental theoretical treatise "Painting and the Elements", in which he outlined his own revolutionary concept: art should reflect the dynamics of modern life - movement, speed, energy of machines and people. In fact, Bogomazov proposed for the 20th century not just a new form or style, but a fundamentally new concept painting. Almost all his short life, Alexander Bogomazov lived in Kyiv. He was an experimenter, and his work was a constant search for a "new formula".
In 1927, Alexander Bogomazov began an extremely ambitious project - a triptych in rainbow colors "Pylyari". This work became the culmination of his creative life. In it, he embodied his main ideas and views on art, set out in the treatise. From the pieces of this puzzle, you can assemble one of the three paintings of the triptych, which is stored in the National Art Museum of Ukraine. Unfortunately, like most Ukrainian avant-garde artists, Bogomazov was forgotten and banned during the USSR; his legacy was hidden for a long time. Only at the end of the 20th century were his works rediscovered and now the recognition of the importance of this artist's legacy in the history of avant-garde art is gradually growing






