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Vera Ignat'evna Muchina Sold at Auction Prices

Sculptor, b. 1889 - d. 1953

Vera Ignatyevna Mukhina (1 July [O.S. 19 June] 1889 – 6 October 1953) was a prominent Soviet sculptor and painter. She was nicknamed "the queen of Soviet sculpture".

Mukhina was born 1889 in Riga, Russian Empire[2] into a wealthy merchant family, and lived at 23/25 Turgeneva Street, where a memorial plaque has now been placed. Mukhina's ancestors lived in Riga after the Patriotic War of 1812. The family was well-to-do: in 1937 Mukhina inherited 4 million lats from her grandfather.[3] She spent her childhood and youth (1892-1904) in Feodosia where her father took her considering his daughter's health (Vera was two years old when her mother died of tuberculosis).[4] In Feodosia the future artist received her first drawing and painting lessons. She lived there until 1904 when her father died. Mukhina and her older sister Maria were sheltered by uncles and aunts who lived in Kursk, where Mukhina went to high school which she graduated from with honors.

On Christmas day of 1912 when Mukhina was staying at her uncle's place in the Smolensk province, she had an accident. While sledding down a hill, she crashed into a tree and her nose was cut off with a twig. She had a surgery in hospital in Smolensk but the scars remained on her face for good. Moreover, her girlish delicate face looked very different after eight subsequent plastic surgeries carried out by French surgeons. It acquired a masculine look with rough and strong-willed features. This accident had a tremendous effect on Mukhina’s life and her future career.[5]

She later moved to Moscow, where she studied at several private art schools, including those of Konstantin Yuon and Ilya Mashkov. In 1912 she traveled to Paris, where she attended the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and took lessons from Emile-Antoine Bourdelle, then continued on to Italy to explore the painting and sculpture of the Renaissance period. Mukhina returned to Moscow in summer 1914 two weeks before World War I began. Having taken nursing courses, she began working in a military hospital.[6] Here, also in 1914, she met the young military doctor Alexey Zamkov, whom she married in 1918.[7]

In 1915 and 1916, she served as assistant to Aleksandra Ekster at Alexander Tairov's Chamber Theater in Moscow.[8] After the October Revolution in Russia the so-called "Lenin plan of monumental propaganda" was adopted. Sculptors received state orders to make city monuments. Mukhina in 1918 completed the project of the monument dedicated to the educator and publicist Nikolay Ivanovich Novikov. The project was approved by Narkompros, but the model of the monument made of clay and stored in an unheated workshop got cracked, and the project remained unfulfilled.[9] Within the framework of monumental propaganda Mukhina created sketches of the sculptures Liberated labor and Revolution (1919) as well as monuments to Vladimir Mikhailovich Zakorskiy (1921) and Yakov Mikhailovich Sverdlov (also known as The Flame of the Revolution, 1923).[10]

In the 1920s Mukhina rose to become one of the Soviet Union's most prominent sculptors, and although she continued to produce Cubist sculpture as late as 1922, she became a leading figure of Socialist realism, both in style and ideology. In 1923 Mukhina together with Aleksandra Ekster designed the pavilion of the newspaper Izvestia at the first all-Russia agricultural and handicraft-industrial exhibition in Moscow. In 1925 Mukhina and Nadezhda Petrovna Lamanova,the fashion designer, received the Grand Prix at the exhibition in Paris for the collection of elegant women's clothing made of cheap coarse materials — cloth, calico, canvas and flannel, hats-from matting, belts decorated with colored peas, and buttons carved from wood. Dresses were decorated with original ornaments, including the "cock pattern" invented by Mukhina.[11]

Mukhina taught at the state school Vkhutemas in 1926–1927, and in 1927–1930 she taught at the higher art and technical institute Vkhutein. In 1927 the sculpture Peasant woman created by Mukhina was awarded the first prize at the exhibition dedicated to the 10th anniversary of the October Revolution. Later the sculpture was purchased by the Museum of Trieste, and after World War II it became the property of the Vatican Museums in Rome.[12]

Mukhina came to the international attention with the 1937 Worker and Kolkhoz Woman. In 1938–1939 she worked on the sculptures for the Moskvoretsky Bridge, Hymn to the International, Flame of the Revolution, Sea, Land, Fertility, and Bread. Bread (1939) is the only composition made by Mukhina; the rest were recreated from sketches after her death.

From October 1941 to April 1942 she lived and worked in the evacuation center in Kamensk-Uralsky. In 1945 Mukhina was invited to Riga as an expert to make a conclusion on the monument Freedom which was going to be demolished. She came out strongly in defense of the monument although her opinion contradicted that of the party and the monument was preserved. She is the creator of two monuments to Maxim Gorky: one of them was installed in 1943 in Moscow at the Belorussky Rail Terminal, the other was installed in 1952 in the city of Gorky.

Another famous work by Mukhina is the monument to Tchaikovsky. It was installed in 1954 in the courtyard of the Moscow Conservatory on Bolshaya Nikitskaya Street. This sculptural composition is located in front of the main facade of the Conservatory and is the dominant feature of the entire architectural complex.

Mukhina's work on official monuments and architectural sculpture on state commissions continued through her death. She also experimented with glass, producing glass figural busts. Seeking to enrich the artistic vocabulary of Soviet art. She often presented her theories on sculpture, experimented with new materials, and developed a technique of polychromatic sculpture. She decorated exhibitions, made industrial drawings, and designed clothes, textiles, porcelain and theatrical costumes for the Vakhtangov Theater in Moscow.[13][14]

From 1941 to 1952, Mukhina won the Stalin Prize five times, and she was named People's Artist of the USSR in 1943.[15] Because of Mukhina's influence as a great Soviet artist, and as a former student of the Latvian sculptor Karlis Zale, she persuaded Soviet officials in the late 1940s that the Freedom Monument in Riga was of great artistic importance. Due to her efforts, the monument was not demolished to make way for a statue of Joseph Stalin.[16]

In 1953 she wrote the book A Sculptor's Thoughts.[17]

Death and legacy: Mukhina died in Moscow on 6 October 1953 of angina.[18] She is buried in Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow.

The Museum of Vera Mukhina dedicated to the sculptor's adolescence and work was established in Feodosiya, Crimea, Ukraine in 1985.[19]

There is a Vera Mukhina Street in the town Klin, Moscow Oblast.[20]

In 2007, Mukhina's house and studio at 3a Prechistensky Lane in Moscow were slated for demolition.[21]

The crater on Venus is named in honor of Mukhina.

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      • RUSSIAN SOVIET COSTUME DESIGN ATTR. VERA MUKHINA
        May. 14, 2022

        RUSSIAN SOVIET COSTUME DESIGN ATTR. VERA MUKHINA

        Est: $100 - $150

        A watercolor on paper costume design sketch depicting a man with a sword for the production of Dinner of Evil Jokes, attributed to Vera Mukhina, Russian, Soviet, 1889 to 1953. Signed and titled lower center. Unframed. Vera Ignatyevna Mukhina was a prominent Soviet sculptor and painter. She was nicknamed as the queen of Soviet sculpture. People's Artist of the USSR, full member of the Academy of Arts of the USSR, laureate of five Stalin Prizes. Collectible Soviet Theater Related Avant Garde Artworks, Russian Fine Art For Collectors.

        Antique Arena Inc
      • A RARE 1930 SOVIET AGRICULTURE EXPO SILVER SPOON
        Apr. 24, 2022

        A RARE 1930 SOVIET AGRICULTURE EXPO SILVER SPOON

        Est: $150 - $200

        This rare silver spoon was made to commemorate the All-Union Agricultural Exhibition in Moscow in 1939. The handle is decorated with a relief image of the monument "Worker and Kolkhoz Woman" by Vera Mukhina (1889-1953). Hallmarks: 875 silver standard, the five-pointed star with hammer and sickle, and other Russian Soviet hallmarks. Weight: 1 oz., 27.9 gr.

        Helios Auctions
      • Vera Ignatievna MUCHINA (1889-1953) Etude de costume de théâtre
        Nov. 20, 2021

        Vera Ignatievna MUCHINA (1889-1953) Etude de costume de théâtre

        Est: €300 - €500

        Vera Ignatievna MUCHINA (1889-1953) Etude de costume de théâtre Gouache sur carton, signée en cyrillique en bas à vers la gauche 47,5 x 32,7 cm

        Louiza Auktion & Associés
      • Bust, Stalin-Marble,s.d.Vera Mukhina, Mockba 1947
        Feb. 17, 2014

        Bust, Stalin-Marble,s.d.Vera Mukhina, Mockba 1947

        Est: $1,000 - $2,000

        Bust Age: 1947 Materials: Marble Marks: Mukhi, Mockba, 1947 Country of Origin: Russian Size: 27H x 19W x 9"D Weight: > 200lb. Description: Life bust of Joseph Stalin by Vera Mukhi, 1889-1953. Vera Ignatyevna Mukhina (Russian: ??´?? ????´?????? ??´????; Latvian: Vera Muhina; born 1 July [O.S. 19 June] 1889 in Riga; died 6 October 1953 in Moscow) was a prominent Soviet sculptor.Contents [hide] 1 Life2 Work3 Honours and legacy4 References5 SourcesLife[edit] Vera Mukhina on a 1989 Soviet Union postage stamp.Mukhina was born in Riga into a wealthy merchant family, and lived at Turgeneva st. 23/25, where a memorial plaque has now been placed. She later moved to Moscow, where she studied at several private art schools, including those of Konstantin Yuon and Ilya Mashkov. In 1912 she traveled to Paris, where she attended the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and took lessons from Emile-Antoine Bourdelle, then continued on to Italy to explore the art and sculptures of the Renaissance period.In 1915 and 1916, she served as assistant to Aleksandra Ekster at Alexander Tairov's Chamber Theater in Moscow. In 1918 she married Alexei Zamkov, a military surgeon.In the 1920s Mukhina rose to become one of the Soviet Union's most prominent sculptors, and although she continued to produce cubist sculpture as late as 1922, she became a leading figure of Socialist realism, both in style and ideology. She taught at the state school, Vkhutemas, in 1926-1927, and came to international attention with the 1937 Worker and Kolkhoz Woman. Her studio's work on official monuments and architectural sculpture on state commissions continued through her death. She also experimented with glass, producing glass figural busts.From 1941 to 1952, Mukhina won the Stalin Prize five times, was named People's Artist of the USSR in 1943. In 1953 she wrote "A Sculptor's Thoughts".Because of Muhkina's influence as a great Soviet artist, and as a former student of the Latvian sculptor Karlis Zale, she persuaded Soviet officials in the late 1940s that the Freedom Monument in Riga was of great artistic importance. Due to her efforts the monument was not demolished to make way for a statue of Joseph Stalin.Mukhina's house and studio at 3a Prechistensky Lane is slated for demolition. She's buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery.Work[edit]Mukhina's most celebrated work by far is the giant monument Worker and Kolkhoz Woman which was the centerpiece of the Soviet pavilion at the 1937 International Exhibition in Paris.[1] It was the world's first welded sculpture.[2] The 24-meter-tall, 75-ton monument was made of plate of stainless steel on a wooden frame, the plates connected by an innovative method of spot welding. One hand of each figure holds respectively a hammer and a sickle, the two implements joining to form the hammer and sickle symbol of the Soviet Union. In 1947 the sculpture, now on permanent display at the All-Russia Exhibition Centre, became the logo of the Russian Mosfilm studio. It was renovated and re-installed on a higher pedestal in 2009.Muhkina's other work includes:1927 Peasant Woman, freestanding bronze, now at the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscowthe 1934 Fertility and 1939 Bread, both now standing in Moscow's Friendship Parkthree cornice figures on the pediment of the Winter Theater in Sochi, 1937the monumental group We Demand Peace, 1950-1951 (Mukhina served as coordinator of other sculptors and contributor; her figure is the mourning mother)the 1952 Maxim Gorky Monument in Nizhny Novgorodthe statue of Tchaikovsky in front of the Moscow Conservatorythe finial figure of Mir ("Peace"), with armillary sphere and dove, for the 1954 Volgograd PlanetariumTheatrical costume design (1916) Honours and legacyThis article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Russian Wikipedia.Stalin Prizesfirst class (1941) - for the sculptural group "Worker and Collective Farm Girl" at the Agricultural Exhibition (1937);second class (1943) - a sculptural portraits of Colonels BA Yusupov and IL Khizhnyak (1942);first class (1946) - a sculptural portrait of Krylov;second class (1951) - for the sculptural group "We demand peace!" (Et al);first class (1952) - a monument to Maxim Gorky in Moscow;People's Artist of the USSR (1943);Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1938);Order of the Badge of Honour (1945);Order "Citizenship Award" (Bulgaria)One of streets in the town Klin, Moscow Oblast in honor of sculptor named Vera ?ukhina Street.[3]The Museum of Vera Mukhina was established in Feodosiya, Crimea, Ukraine in 1985. The museum sanctified to childhood, to youth and to artwork of famous sculptor. Provenance: FL collector found in Kiev Condition: Base has missing piece History: Joseph Stalin, or Iosif Vissarionovich Stalin (Russian: ??´??? ????????´????? ???´???, pronounced ['jos??f v??s?'r?on?v??t?? 'stal??n]; born Ioseb Besarionis dze Jugashvili, Georgian: ????? ?????????? ?? ?????????, pronounced [i?s?b b?sari?nis d?ze d??u?a?vili]; 18 December 1878[1] â€" 5 March 1953), was the de facto leader of the Soviet Union from the mid-1920s until his death in 1953.

        Louis J. Dianni, LLC
      • Vera Ignatierna Mukhina (1889-1953) Landscape with village and church 27 x 37in.
        Mar. 26, 2009

        Vera Ignatierna Mukhina (1889-1953) Landscape with village and church 27 x 37in.

        Est: £300 - £500

        Vera Ignatierna Mukhina (1889-1953) oil on canvas Landscape with village and church signed and dated 1915 27 x 37in.

        Gorringes
      • MUKHINA, VERA Years: 1889-1953 Self-Portraitcarved
        Nov. 25, 2008

        MUKHINA, VERA Years: 1889-1953 Self-Portraitcarved

        Est: £40,000 - £60,000

        MUKHINA, VERA Years: 1889-1953 Self-Portraitcarved with signature "V. Zamkova", c.1918 Carved wood, height 37 cm. Provenance: Private collection, USA. Exhibited: Sculpture of the 18th-20th Century, The State Russian Museum, Iskusstvo, Leningrad, 1988, p. 108, No.799, illustrated. Related literature: Exhibition catalogue, Sculpture of the 18th-20th Century, The State Russian Museum, Iskusstvo, Leningrad, 1988, p. 108, No. 799, illustrated.

        MacDougall's
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