Never Was Magazine — S.A.M. #9: The Sky of Alexander Deineka: Next...

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S.A.M. #9: The Sky of Alexander Deineka: Next came a number of iconic paintings, each one a ready-made symbol of the Golden Age of Aviation:
Civil Aviation, 1932
Airborne, 1932
Bomber, 1932
Red-Winged Giant, 1937
Gliders in the Sky, another mosaic,...
S.A.M. #9: The Sky of Alexander Deineka:

imageNext came a number of iconic paintings, each one a ready-made symbol of the Golden Age of Aviation:

imageCivil Aviation, 1932

imageAirborne, 1932

imageBomber, 1932

imageRed-Winged Giant, 1937

imageGliders in the Sky, another mosaic, for the Mayakovskaya subway station (1938)

Aircraft were an integral part of his wartime art - from 1941 Moscow:

imageto Berlin on the day of Germany’s surrender:

imageIn 1942, he created one of his most famous and impressive paintings, A Knocked-Down Ace:

imageDeineka’s art is often compared to the the works of Tullio Crali, the last of the Futurists. The comparisons are for the sake of difference: Crali the Futurist envisioned the conquest of space in 1920s; Deineka the Romantic Realist followed the pace of time to paint his “Conquereors of Space” in 1961, the year of the first manned space flight:

imageSpecial thanks to liim.ru and deineka.ru.

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