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  1. Igor Severyanin Grave of Severyanin in Tallinn. Igor Severyanin (Russian: И́горь Северя́нин; pen name, real name Igor Vasilyevich Lotaryov: И́горь Васи́льевич Лотарёв; May 16, 1887 – December 20, 1941) was a Russian poet who presided over the circle of the so-called Ego-Futurists. Igor was ...

  2. 9 de ago. de 2014 · Ígor Severiánin (1887-1941) Los primeros andamios de egofuturismo y su introducción en la literatura fueron muy duros. Todo empezó por una serie de poemas patrióticos, después vinieron poemas humorísticos y, finalmente, se llegó a la composición de la poesía lírica.

  3. Igor Severyanin Poems. 1887-1941. Severyanin, whose real surname was Lotaryov, was born into a noble family; his father was an army officer. He had no formal higher education and published his first poems when he was only eighteen. In October 1911 Severyanin announced the foundation of Egofuturism, which, in addition to the Futurists ...

  4. Igor Severyanin [1887-1941] (Russian: Игорь Северянин, pen name, real name Igor Vasilyevich Lotaryov (Игорь Васильевич Лотарёв), he sometimes preferred to refer to himself by the name 'Igor-Severyanin') was a Russian poet who presided over the circle of the so-called Ego-Futurists.

  5. Igor Severyanin ( Russian: И́горь Северя́нин; pen name, real name Igor Vasilyevich Lotaryov: И́горь Васи́льевич Лотарёв; May 16, 1887 – December 20, 1941) was a Russian poet who presided over the circle of the so-called Ego-Futurists. Grave of Severyanin in Tallinn. Igor was born in St. Petersburg in the family of an army engineer.

  6. Igor Severyanin was voted the most popular poet by a leading maga-zine in Russia in the momentous year of 1918. Known to recite his verse . to large, boisterous crowds of admirers, a rose in his lapel and a champagne . glass (intermittently filled) perched between his thumb and index . finger, he was decidedly not a Bolshevik poet.

  7. 2 Igor Severyanin (pseudonym of Igor V. Lotaryov, 1887–1941), an innovative poet in the use of language, was one of the important representatives of Cubo-Futurism, along with Mayakovsky, in pre-revolutionary Russia. He emigrated in 1918 to Estonia where his poetry, though reverting to.