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Although short-lived, Rayonism was a crucial step in the development of Russian abstract art.
In 1913 he created Rayonism, which was the first creation of near-abstract art in Russia.
Target, the first exhibition of Rayonism.
With her lifelong partner Mikhail Larionov she first developed a style called Rayonism.
His Portrait of Tatline (1911) is witness to the synthesis that Rayonism represented.
Rayonism developed in Russia by Mikhail Larionov and Natalia Goncharova.
The term covers many separate, but inextricably related, art movements that occurred at the time; namely neo-primitivism, suprematism, constructivism, rayonism, and futurism.
In 1912, the artist launched a new artistic concept, "Rayonism," one of the first systems of non-objective art where forms are created by intersecting reflected rays of various objects.
Larionov had in 1911 invented Rayonism, a movement which had a strong abstract bias, although it was closer in many ways to contemporary Futurism than to Cubism.
Mikhail Larionov and Natalia Goncharova developed rayonism after hearing a series of lectures about Futurism by Marinetti in Moscow.
Bohemian Cubists combined Cubism with Expressionism, some with Futurism, Orphism and Rayonism, while others concentrated on national or existential subject matters.
She used these ideas to form the theory of vibrism, which is a combination of Synthetic Cubism of the pre-war period and Larionov and Goncharova's Rayonism.
Mikhail Larionov and Goncharova, who like many of their colleagues had practiced both Cubo-Futurism and neo-Primitivism, led an ephemeral movement called Rayonism, an attempt to deconstruct light.
To some extent Futurism influenced the art movements Art Deco, Constructivism, Surrealism, Dada, and to a greater degree Precisionism, Rayonism, and Vorticism.
Genres covered by this period included Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Constructivism, Cubism, Cubo-Futurism, Neo-Primitivism, Rayonism, Suprematism, and Futurism.
Next she and her lover, the painter Mikhail Larionov, developed Rayonism, a new form of abstraction in which objects fragment into planes resembling splintered glass and everything seems united by invisible force fields.
In their literature they described Rayonism as naturally encompassing all existing styles and forms of the art of the past, as they, like life, are simply points of departure for a Rayonist perception and construction of a picture.
In the context of anti-Rachael Rayism, Lane was an early adopter: she founded the group three years ago, when Ray's "30 Minute Meals" was just another show on the Food Network.
They, in turn, had just come up with Rayism or Rayonnism, the Russian counterpart of Futurism (the book is in the current show by Ilya, also known as Iliazd, at the Museum of Modern Art).