Avant-garde in Russian Literature:
Main Representatives and Works
Automatic translate
The Russian literary avant-garde of the early 20th century became a phenomenon that radically changed the concept of poetry and the boundaries of artistic creativity. The movement spanned the period from 1908 to the first half of the 1930s, giving rise to numerous literary groups and talented authors who experimented with language, form, and content.
2 Cubo-Futurism and the Hylea group
3 Egofuturism
4 Imagism
5 Constructivism
6 OBERIU
7 New Peasant Poetry
8 Proletkult
9 Theoretical basis and experiments
10 Program manifestos
11 The collapse of avant-garde groups
12 Influence and legacy
Origins and background
Avant-garde movements emerged against the backdrop of social upheaval and shifting cultural paradigms at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. Symbolism, which dominated Russian poetry in the 1890s and 1900s, paved the way for further experiments with artistic form. The Young Symbolists, among whom Andrei Bely stood out with his novel "Petersburg," developed a theory of the symbol as a multi-layered sign. Bely demonstrated the possibility of transforming the city into a metaphysical mechanism where reality dissolves in a play of meanings and associations.
The literary avant-garde opposed not only the 19th-century realist tradition but also symbolist aesthetics. The avant-garde declared a break with the past and sought to create a new artistic language capable of conveying the dynamics of modern life. The Futurists proclaimed the exhaustion of the cultural traditions of previous centuries.
Cubo-Futurism and the Hylea group
Cubo-Futurism became the most significant movement in the Russian poetic avant-garde. The movement emerged in 1908–1910 around the "Gileya" group, which brought together artists and poets who sought to combine the principles of Cubism and Futurism. The group included the brothers David and Nikolai Burliuk, Velimir Khlebnikov, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Alexei Kruchenykh, Vasily Kamensky, Elena Guro, and Benedikt Livshits.
Velimir Khlebnikov
Velimir Khlebnikov (1885 – 1922) is considered one of the founders of Cubo-Futurism and the creator of the theory of "zaumnoye langauge." The poet saw his task as a revolutionary transformation of the Russian language: "To find, without breaking the circle of roots, the magic stone for transforming all Slavic words into one another, to freely fuse Slavic words — that is my first approach to the word." Khlebnikov developed the concept of the "self-contained word," free from utilitarian meanings.
His experiments with word creation found expression in his works "The Menagerie," where the poet created neologisms based on Slavic roots. The famous poem "Oh, Laugh, Smechachi!" demonstrates a method of forming new words by varying a single root. Khlebnikov worked to create a universal language uniting the Slavic peoples.
Vladimir Mayakovsky
Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893–1930) entered literary history as a rebel, shocking audiences with provocative images and sharp metaphors. His first collection, "I!", published in 1913 as a lithograph with illustrations by V. Chekrygin and L. Zhegin, attracted critical attention. Valery Bryusov noted that Mayakovsky "has his own perception of reality, his imagination, and his ability to depict."
Mayakovsky employed urban imagery, creating metaphors at the intersection of the human and the machine. His poem "Could You?" contains the lines, "I immediately blurred the map of everyday life, splashing paint from a glass." The poet experimented with the rhythm and graphic structure of verse, developing his famous "ladder."
The tragedy "Vladimir Mayakovsky" (1913) was the Cubo-Futurists’ first major dramatic effort. The poems "A Cloud in Trousers" (1915), "The Spine-Flute" (1916), "War and Peace" (1916), and "Man" (1917) developed the theme of the poet’s conflict with the world. After the revolution, Mayakovsky wrote the poems "150,000,000" (1920), "Vladimir Ilyich Lenin" (1924), "Good!" (1927), and the plays "The Bedbug" (1928) and "The Bathhouse" (1929).
David Burliuk
David Burliuk (1882 – 1967) was the ideologist and organizer of the Cubo-Futurist movement. An artist and poet, he combined pictorial and verbal experiments in his work. Burliuk actively participated in the scandalous performances of the Futurists, who shocked the public with their appearance and provocative statements.
His poem "The Lazy Doe’s Caress of Petals" demonstrates the play of sound associations characteristic of Cubo-Futurism. Burliuk developed a theory of "pictorial poetry," in which words acquired visual materiality.
Alexey Kruchenykh
Alexey Kruchenykh (1886–1968) became a radical experimenter in the field of zaum language. In his seminal article, "The Word as Such," he cited zaum lines and asserted that "this five-line stanza contains more of the Russian national spirit than all of Pushkin’s poetry." Kruchenykh created texts built solely on sound combinations, devoid of semantic content.
Vasily Kamensky
Vasily Kamensky (1884–1961) developed a "reinforced concrete poetry" using graphic experiments and visual effects. His poem "There is a country / Far away / Somewhere abandoned / Maybe I’ll return" demonstrates a characteristic fragmentary and associative nature of imagery. Kamensky actively utilized the grammatical resources of language to create poetic images.
Elena Guro
Elena Guro (1877–1913) introduced a lyrical element to Cubo-Futurism, softening the movement’s aggressive aesthetic. Her poem "Freakish, Madcap, Flyer" combines wordplay with impressionistic imagery. Guro worked on the border between poetry and prose, creating miniature texts.
Benedict Livshits
Benedikt Livshits (1886 – 1938) was a theorist of Cubo-Futurism and the author of the memoir "One-and-a-Half-Eyed Archer" (1933). His poems were distinguished by complex metaphors and a focus on pictorial associations. Livshits strove to create a "verbal Cubism" that deconstructed objects into their component elements.
Egofuturism
Egofuturism emerged as an alternative to Cubofuturism and was the personal invention of Igor Severyanin. The movement emerged in 1911–1912 and was short-lived, collapsing due to internal contradictions.
Igor Severyanin
Igor Severyanin (1887–1941) proclaimed egofuturism in 1911, publishing a poetry brochure, "Streams in Lilies," with the subtitle "Ego-Futurism" for his poem, "Ordinary People." The movement’s slogans included the soul as the only truth, self-affirmation of the individual, and the search for the new without rejecting the old.
Fundamental to the Severianin doctrine was the assertion of universal justification, leading to complete social indifference. In "Champagne Polonaise" (1912), the poet defiantly equated mutually exclusive ideological and existential contradictions.
Severyanin created a distinctive poetic style, rich in neologisms, Gallicisms, and exotic vocabulary. His poetry recitals were a huge success, and in 1918, at a poetry competition held at the Polytechnic Museum, Severyanin was elected "King of Poets." His collections of poems, "Thunderboiling Cup" (1913), "Zlatolira" (1914), and "Pineapples in Champagne" (1915), brought him widespread renown.
In 1912, Severyanin wrote "Epilogue to Ego-Futurism," effectively burying his own invention. He sought recognition from the older Symbolists and had no need to collaborate with the proponents of Ego-Futurism.
Konstantin Olimpov
Konstantin Olimpov (Konstantin Fofanov Jr.) considered himself the author of the fundamental tenets of the "Tablets of Egopoetry," the term "poetry," and the "Ego" symbol itself. His conflict with Severyanin over leadership of the movement hastened the group’s disintegration.
Imagism
Imagism emerged in 1919 as a literary movement that proclaimed the creation of images as the primary goal of creativity. The movement united poets who strove for maximum metaphor and figurative richness in verse.
Sergei Yesenin
Sergei Yesenin (1895–1925) was the most famous representative of Imagism, although his work transcended the movement’s framework. The poet synthesized folk traditions with Imagist innovation. His early collections, "Radunitsa" (1916) and "Goluben" (1918), were written before his embrace of Imagism.
Yesenin’s Imagist period is marked by the collections "Treryadnitsa" (1921), "Confession of a Hooligan" (1921), and "Poems of a Scandalist" (1923). The poem "Pugachev" (1921) demonstrates the metaphorical chains characteristic of Imagist aesthetics. Yesenin employed rich, unexpected combinations of imagery.
The poet’s later works — the cycle "Persian Motifs" (1924–1925), the poems "Anna Snegina" (1925), "The Black Man" (1925), and the poems "Soviet Rus" and "Vanishing Rus" — are marked by a departure from the Imagist program. Yesenin evolved toward more traditional forms while maintaining a richness of imagery.
Vadim Shershenevich
Vadim Shershenevich (1893–1942) was the leading theorist of Imagism. He proclaimed a "free image" without connection to the whole, declaring the image-as-a-detached entity to be the end in itself of creativity. Shershenevich saw the development of poetic expression as "the image’s consuming of meaning," "its victory over meaning," and "the liberation of the word from content."
Anarchist motifs permeated Shershenevich’s work. He rejected traditions and social norms, developing the concept of the intrinsic value of words. His theoretical works defined the aesthetics of Imagism as a movement.
Anatoly Mariengof
Anatoly Mariengof (1897–1962) developed an urbanist approach to Imagism. His poems are saturated with images of urban civilization and mechanical metaphors. Mariengof synthesized tradition and innovation, using urbanism as the basis of his poetics.
Constructivism
Constructivism emerged as an independent literary group in Moscow in the spring of 1922. The movement was initially narrowly formal, emphasizing the understanding of a literary work as a construct.
Ilya Selvinsky
Ilya Selvinsky (1899–1968) became the de facto leader of the Constructivist group. The first members of the group were the poets A. Chicherin and I. Selvinsky, and the critic K. Zelinsky, the group’s theoretician.
Constructivism was primarily a school of epic verse. Selvinsky’s poem "Ulyalaevshchina" (1924) was considered the first "convincing and directly moving creation of the constructivist style." Critic Abram Lezhnev called "Ulyalaevshchina" "one of the most powerful works of Soviet poetry."
Selvinsky’s work of the first period revealed the image of a strong individual, a powerful builder and conqueror of life. The social source of constructivism was the technically skilled intelligentsia.
Vladimir Lugovskoy
Vladimir Lugovskoy (1901–1957) was among the leaders of the Constructivist movement. His poetry was distinguished by its dynamism, clear composition, and focus on contemporary themes.
Nikolay Aseev
Nikolai Aseyev (1889–1963) was a Constructivist, although he began as a Futurist. His work combined Futurist experiments with a Constructivist emphasis on the functionality of poetic text.
Eduard Bagritsky
Eduard Bagritsky (1895–1934) was a member of the Constructivist Literary Center for several years. His romantic poetry enriched Constructivism with lyrical pathos.
OBERIU
OBERIU (Association of Real Art) emerged in Leningrad in the late 1920s. Its history began in 1922, when several young poets and philosophers founded the poetry and philosophy circle "chinari."
Daniil Harms
Daniil Kharms (1905–1942) was one of the leaders of OBERIU. His aesthetic ideas were influenced by Matyushin’s concept of "expanded viewing" and experiments with altered modes of perception. Kharms employed zaumochnost’ (transrationalism), continuing the Cubo-Futurist tradition.
Kharms’s work is marked by absurdist poetics, the dismantling of cause-and-effect relationships, and experiments with narrative logic. His texts balance on the brink of meaning and nonsense.
Alexander Vvedensky
Alexander Vvedensky (1904–1941) worked in 1923 in the "freelance" phonology department of the State Institute of Philosophy of the Humanities under the direction of I. G. Terentyev. Vvedensky created philosophical poetry exploring the issues of time, death, and language.
The Oberiuts disavowed Futurist zaum in their manifesto, declaring, "There is no school more hostile to us than zaum." However, some Oberiuts, such as Harms and Vvedensky, employed zaum in their practice.
Nikolai Zabolotsky
Nikolai Zabolotsky (1903–1958) categorically rejected the use of zaum. His poetry was distinguished by its philosophical depth and exploration of natural philosophical themes.
In December 1931, the leading OBERIUTs, Kharms and Vvedensky, were arrested for the first time. The movement was crushed, and its members were subjected to repression.
New Peasant Poetry
New peasant poetry brought together authors from the common people and oriented toward folklore traditions. The movement contrasted "bookish" culture with "folk" literature.
Nikolay Klyuev
Nikolai Klyuev (1884–1937) was the elder and ideologist of the new peasant movement. He emerged as a vibrant, strong, and consistent representative of this movement. The cult of Nature and a rejection of civilization became the fundamental characteristic of new peasant poetry.
Klyuev focused on song and fairy tales from his first steps in literature. The collection "The Ringing of Pines" included previously created stylizations of "The Song of Tsar Falcon and the Three Birds of God." The poet drew on folk culture, primarily song and poetry.
Sergey Klychkov
Sergei Klychkov (1889–1937) first published his poetry collection, "Songs," in 1911. His early poetry collections ("Songs: Sadness-Joy. Lada. Bova," 1911; "The Secret Garden," 1913) were resonant with the poems of Yesenin, Klyuev, Ganin, and Oreshin.
Klychkov was influenced by the poetics of Blok and the early Gorodetsky. Through his appreciation of Symbolist and Acmeist poetry, he embraced the traditions of folk poetry. The imagery of his poems was linked to the poetic symbolism of Slavic mythology.
Subsequent collections — "Dubravna" (1918), "Home Songs" (1923), "The Wonderful Guest" (1923), and "Visiting the Cranes" (1930) — reflected the impact of World War I and the destruction of the village. One of the key images was the lonely, homeless wanderer.
Proletkult
Proletkult (the Proletarian Cultural and Educational Organization) was finally formed in September 1917 and quickly gained mass popularity. The organization had branches in factories and plants, as well as its own studios, clubs, and theaters. More than 30 magazines and almanacs were published, and collections of proletarian poets were widely distributed.
The primary goal was to create a new proletarian culture, free from the negative characteristics of past cultures. Proletkult ideologists viewed art and literature as weapons of class struggle.
Alexey Gastev
Alexey Gastev (1882–1939) was one of the leading figures of proletarian poetry. His work is characterized by a cult of the worker, iron, machines, machine tools, factories, and industrial labor. Gastev believed that a time would come when "the world itself will become a new machine, where the cosmos will for the first time find its own heart, its own beat."
Mikhail Gerasimov
Mikhail Gerasimov (1889–1939) earned the nickname "the poet of iron and fire." His poems were saturated with images of industrial labor and revolutionary enthusiasm. Gerasimov wrote: "Clad in the winged dawn, / We will boldly soar into the sky, / Like a thunderous comet / We will cut through the Milky Way."
Vladimir Kirillov
Vladimir Kirillov (1890–1937) was called the "iron messiah." His poetry embodied revolutionary pathos and faith in the transformative power of the proletariat.
The characteristic features of proletarian cosmism were: the cult of revolution and the proletariat, the glorification of labor, abstract utopianism, gigantomania, titanism, mechanization, technocracy, and collectivism. With its class-based approach and the absorption of the individual into the collective, this version of cosmism differed sharply from the Christian version, which posited the intrinsic value of the individual.
Theoretical basis and experiments
Avant-garde movements developed a variety of metrical, rhythmic, and phonetic experiments. The search for new rhythmic and sound forms in Russian versification was highly polemical.
Zaum (transrational language) became a radical experiment for the Futurists. The Futurists’ work resulted in an unprecedented surge in word creation. Khlebnikov and Kruchenykh developed a theory of zaum, in which words were freed from semantic load and acquired independent value.
Word creation and the use of zaum (transrational language) were among the key techniques in the work of the Russian Futurists. The OBERIUs used word creation in their own way, distancing themselves from the Futurist zaum (transrational language).
The dialogue between linguistics and the poetic avant-garde in Russia in the 1920s and 1930s gave rise to experiments with a universal language. This period was marked by sociopolitical reforms that led to new realities and concepts. Societies were formed that studied international languages — Esperanto, Ido, Interlingua, and Novial.
Program manifestos
The Cubo-Futurists published a manifesto, "A Slap in the Face of Public Taste," with a deliberately scandalous title. It declared a rejection of the art of the past, calling for "throwing Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and so on, and so forth, off the ship of modernity."
The Cubo-Futurists’ first joint publication was the poetry collection "The Trap of Judges." The idea of the exhaustion of the cultural traditions of previous centuries was the starting point of the Cubo-Futurists’ aesthetic platform.
In January 1912, Severyanin sent out a program of egofuturism to several newspapers. The slogans of his egofuturism were: the soul is the only power; self-affirmation of the individual; the search for the new without rejecting the old.
The Imagists proclaimed the creation of images as the primary goal of creativity. Shershenevich developed the theory of "free image," which replaces content in art.
Constructivists emphasized the understanding of a literary work as a construct. Initially, the Constructivists’ program had a narrowly formal focus.
OBERIU issued a manifesto disavowing Futurist zaum and proclaiming the principles of "real art." The OBERIU members created absurd poems and texts that transcended everyday logic.
The collapse of avant-garde groups
By the early 1930s, avant-garde movements had been supplanted by the normative aesthetics of socialist realism. The authorities dictated the "necessary" direction of the visual arts and literature, allowing only the official segment of the artistic community to express their creative potential.
Egofuturism disintegrated in 1912 after Severyanin wrote "Epilogue to Egofuturism." Imagism ceased to exist in the mid-1920s. Constructivism was liquidated in the early 1930s.
OBERIU was destroyed after the arrests of 1931. Many avant-garde artists were repressed: Klyuev was shot in 1937, Klychkov in 1937, Harms died in prison in 1942, Vvedensky died during the evacuation in 1941.
Representatives of the creative and cultural elite recognized the importance of preserving the country’s avant-garde cultural potential. Collectors Savitsky, Kostaki, and Pushkarev assembled collections that comprehensively reflect the artistic development of the 1920s and 1930s.
Influence and legacy
The Russian avant-garde had a profound influence on 20th-century global art. Experiments with language, form, and content opened up new possibilities for poetry. The search for new rhythmic and sound forms in Russian versification during the modernist era — from pre-symbolism to constructivism — defined the development of Russian poetry.
Khlebnikov’s work influenced the Russian Expressionists. Word-making and zaum (transrationalism) continued to develop in the work of poets of the second half of the 20th century. Selvinsky’s constructivism proved to be the last school of verse, a fully-fledged artistic movement, before the coming socialist realist crisis in literature.
The influence of Symbolism and the avant-garde can be traced in Czech and Russian literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The aesthetic and philosophical concepts of Russian Symbolism at certain stages of its development (the Decadent-Symbolist movement, theurgic Symbolism) influenced West Slavic literatures.
Avant-garde experiments with altered modes of perception, developed at Ginkhuk, influenced the aesthetics of the OBERIU group. Matyushin’s concept of "expanded viewing" became part of Kharms’s artistic method.
Proletarian cosmism envisioned revolution, class struggle, and collective labor as interrelated activities for world order and the exploration of space. This form of cosmism differed from religious cosmism in its class approach and the absorption of the individual into the collective.
Avant-garde literature of the early 20th century became a laboratory for artistic experimentation, the results of which determined the development of Russian and world poetry for decades to come. The radical renewal of artistic forms and methods reflected the revolutionary mood in society.
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