Russian Art

Malevich, K. S. "Head of a Peasant". 1928 - 1932

Notes: Head of a Peasant. Kasemir Malevich used the faceless face to communicate the shocking anonymity of a large-scale catastrophe -- in this case, the horrible famine that swept the Russian countryside at this time. Though faceless and anonymous, Malevich's figures nonetheless convey a sense of pride and stature. Portrayed as types rather than individuals, they pose the tragedy of the times as a collective rather than personal experience and thus become a lens through which the viewer can conceive the greater world.
Copyright ©. George Goce Mitrevski. mitrevski@pelister.org