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  1. Varvara Stepanova. Illustration for Gly-gly. 1919. Aleksei Kruchenykh. Collage and pen and ink on cardboard. 6 x 4 1/2" (15.3 x 11.5 cm). unpublished. Gift of The Judith Rothschild Foundation (Anonymous donation). 2546.2001.

  2. This thesis is dedicated to the work of the Russian Avant-Garde artist Ivan Albertovich Puni (1892-1956): an artist, a theorist and writer, an organizer of exhibition, a teacher of art, and above all, an innovator. This thesis presents an account of the artist's Berlin period (1920-1924), which has so far lacked scholarly attention.

  3. Aleksei Kruchenykh, Aleksandr Labas. Zzudo. Zudutnye zudesa (Iitchily: Itchy Itchiness). 1921. Aleksei Kruchenykh. Book with two ink illustrations, one oil paint illustration, rubber-stamped text, and watercolor, ink, and hectographed manuscript text. page (irreg.): 6 15/16 x 5 3/16" (17.6 x 13.2 cm).

  4. Aleksei Kruchenykh. Valia Zdanevich. 1923. Collage with photograph, pencil and watercolor manuscript text. sheet: 13 3/16 x 8 7/16" (33.5 x 21.5 cm). Gift of The Judith Rothschild Foundation (Boris Kerdimun Archive). 5.2001.

  5. Aleksei Kruchenykh (1886–1968) still retains the repu-tation given him in the 1920s by his Futurist colleagues and the general public as the “wild man of Russian liter-ature.”1 The main reason for this is his creation of the most radical form of so-called transrational language (zaum), which involved the production of poetry using

  6. Velimir Khlebnikov is the co-inventor along with his fellow Russian poet Aleksei Kruchenykh of trans-sense or transrational language (zaum). This new approach to poetic language adopted by the Russian Futurists aimed at liberating sound from meaning to create a primeval language of sounds. Photograph of Velimir Khlebnikov from Wikimedia Commons...

  7. Vladimir Vladimirovich Mayakovsky was born in 1893 in Baghdati, Kutais Governorate, Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire, to Alexandra Alexeyevna (née Pavlenko), a housewife, and Vladimir Mayakovsky, a local forester. His father belonged to a noble family and was a distant relative of the writer Grigory Danilevsky.