Archipenko Alexander [Arxypenko, Oleksander], b 30
May 1887 in
Kyiv, d 25 February 1964 in
New York. (Photo: Alexander Archipenko.) Modernist sculptor, painter, pedagogue, and a full member of the International
Institute of Arts and Literature from 1953. Archipenko studied art at the Kyiv Art School in 1902–5, in Moscow in 1906–8 (photo: Archipenko in Moscow), and then briefly at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. His
first one-man show took place in 1906 in Ukraine. He moved to Paris in 1909. In 1910 he exhibited
his works with a group of Cubists at the Salon des Artistes Indépendants
and then exhibited his works there annually until 1914 (photo: Repose [1912]). In 1911 his works appeared also at the Salon d'Automne. In 1912
Archipenko joined a new artistic group—La Section d'Or, which
numbered among its members P. Picasso, G. Braque, J. Gris, F. Léger, R.
Delaunay, R. de la Fresnaye,
J. Villon, F. Picabia, and M. Duchamp—and participated in the group's
exhibitions. In 1912 Archipenko opened his own school of sculpture in Paris (photo: Archipenko in Paris
in 1913). At his individual exhibition
at the Folkwang Museum in Hagen, Germany, in 1912, Archipenko displayed Médrano
I, the first modern sculpture made of various polychromed materials (wood,
glass, and metal fiber). It was followed by Médrano II (1913–14). At this time he also created the first so-called sculpto-peintures
(carved and painted plaster reliefs, such as Woman before a Mirror [1916]) and the first modern sculpture composed of concave forms
contrasted with convex ones and incorporating elements of color and the
void—Walking Woman. In 1913
Archipenko’s works appeared at the Armory Show in New York, and he held
his first individual exhibition at Galerie der Sturm in Berlin. In the
following year he participated in a cubist exhibition in Prague and a futurist
(see Futurism) exhibition in Rome, and exhibited such works as Carrousel Pierrot and Boxing at Salon des Artistes
Indépendants. During the First World War he lived in
Cimiez near Nice, where, in 1917, he developed a cubist play, La Vie Humaine; he
returned to Paris in 1918. From 1919 to 1921 Archipenko's works were exhibited
in many cities throughout Europe. In 1920 he was given a separate pavilion at
the Venice Biennale, and in 1920 and 1921 his work appeared at the exhibitions
of La Section
d'Or in Paris, Brussels, Geneva, Rome, and several cities in the Netherlands
(photo: Archipenko's Woman [1920]). In 1921 Archipenko moved to Berlin, where he established a school of
sculpture. He held a retrospective exhibition at Potsdam and his first
individual exhibition in the United States, at the Société
Anonyme in New York. (Photo: Archipenko's Turning Torso [1921].) In 1923 Archipenko moved to the United States. He established a school in
New York, and in the following year, he moved it to Woodstock, New Jersey.
In 1927 he created and received a patent for changeable pictures (peinture
changeante) known as Archipentura and Apparatus for Displaying Changeable
Pictures. (Archipentura was lost in 1935.) Besides working at his art,
Archipenko devoted much time to teaching. He was in constant contact with
various universities, among them those in Oakland, Los Angeles,
Seattle, and Chicago (the New Bauhaus School). In 1927 an exhibition of his
works was arranged in Tokyo. In 1929 he established a school of ceramics, Arko, in New York. In 1933 his work appeared in the Ukrainian Pavilion
at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. The Nazi regime confiscated
22 of Archipenko's sculptures in German museums in the 1930s. In 1937 he moved
to Chicago, where he opened his Modern School of Fine Arts and Practical
Design. In 1947 Archipenko created the first sculptures out of transparent
materials (plastics) with interior illumination (modeling light)—l'art
de la réflexion. In 1948 he exhibited his new plexiglass works at
the Associated American Artists Galleries in New York. In 1952 and 1953 his
work was exhibited in São Paulo, Brazil, and in Guatemala. In 1955 and
1956 his exhibitions toured Germany. In 1956 Archipenko tried his hand at
moving figures (figures tournantes), which were mechanically rotating
structures built of wood, mother of pearl, and metal. (Photo: Archipenko at work.) In 1959 he received the gold medal at Biennale d'Arte Trivenata at
Padua, Italy. In 1960 his largest monograph, Fifty Creative Years,
1908–1958, appeared. Parts of it had been published previously in
Ukrainian art journals. In 1962 Archipenko was elected to the Department of Art
of the National Institute of Arts and Letters in the United States. His last
works were two large bronzes, Queen of Sheba (1961) and King Solomon (1964) (photo: Archipenko working on King Solomon), and 10 lithographs entitled Les formes vivantes. In 1963 and
1964 large retrospective exhibitions of Archipenko's sculptures, drawings, and
prints were held in Rome, Milan, and Munich. From 1967 to 1969 posthumous
retrospective exhibitions of his work were organized by the University of
California (Los Angeles) at 10 American museums and by the Smithsonian
Institution at various European museums, including the Rodin Museum in Paris.
In 1974 a
large retrospective exhibition “Alexander Archipenko – A Pioneer of
Modern Sculpture” took place in Tokyo, and was followed by numerous
exhibitions in the United States and Europe. As a cubist, Archipenko utilized
interdependent geometrical lines and introduced new concepts and methods into
sculpture. Juan Gris wrote about Archipenko’s influence on the art of the
early 20th century: “Archipenko challenged the traditional understanding
of sculpture. It was generally monochromatic at the time. His pieces were
painted in bright colors. Instead of accepted materials such as marble, bronze or plaster, he used mundane materials such as wood, glass, metal,
and wire. His creative process did not involve carving or modeling in the
accepted tradition but nailing, pasting and tying together, with no attempt to
hide nails, junctures or seams. His process parallels the visual experience of
cubist painting.” Although cubism formed the basis of Archipenko’s
art, it was not the only style he worked in. He himself referred to it in the
following way: “As form my art, the geometric character of
three-dimensional sculptures (e.g., Boxing, 1913, Gondolier, 1914) is due to the extreme simplification of
form and not to Cubist dogma. I did not take from Cubism, but added to it.” Archipenko's purpose was to discover the laws
of formal relationships through a precise examination of the great historical
styles and to preserve the old foundations of the plastic arts while
transforming them in his own way. His creative and logical thought was also
opposed to his dynamic personality, and this dramatic conflict endowed his art
with an intriguing vitality. Archipenko never severed his ties with his countrymen. During his first
years in Paris he was a member of the Ukrainian Students' Club; in Berlin, a
member of the Ukrainian Hromada; and in the United
States, a member of the Ukrainian Artists' Association
in the USA. His works appeared at the
association's exhibitions. He belonged to the Ukrainian Academy
of Arts and Sciences and
the Ukrainian Institute of America.
Many of his works have Ukrainian themes, eg, the relief Ukraine (1940),
four busts of Taras Shevchenko (photo: Archipenko's bust of
Taras Shevchenko) (one of them in the Park of
Nationalities in Cleveland), busts of Ivan Franko and Prince Volodymyr the Great, and portraits of Ukrainian public figures. Some of Archipenko's
exhibitions, such as the one at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago,
were sponsored by Ukrainian groups. In Soviet Ukraine Archipenko's name was never
mentioned before his death. Five of his sculptures and paintings at the of Lviv
Museum of Ukrainian Art were
destroyed in the 1950s. Although his name began appearing in the artistic press
during the post-Stalin Thaw, Vitalii Korotych's
monograph about him was suppressed. With the lessening of censorship and Party
control during the perestroika period in the late 1980s, Archipenko quickly
acquired recognition as one of Ukraine’s most prominent twentieth-century
artists. The first Soviet book devoted to his works appeared in Kyiv in in
1989. The first exhibition of his works in post-Soviet Ukraine, entitled
“Preserved in Ukraine,” took place in Kyiv in 2001.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Goll, I. Archipenko – Album (Potsdam 1921)Holubets', M.
‘Arkhypenko,’ Ukraïns'ke mystetstvo (Lviv 1922) Hildebrandt, H. Alexander
Archipenko (Berlin 1923; separate editions in English, German, French, Ukrainian,
and later, Spanish)Raynal, M. A. Archipenko (Rome 1923)Wiese, E. Alexander
Archipenko (Leipzig 1923)Schacht, R. Alexander Archipenko. Sturm
Bilderbücher (Berlin 1924)Hordynsky, S. ‘The Art World of
Archipenko,’ The Ukrainian Quarterly
11, no. 3 (1955) Karshan, D.H. (ed). Archipenko, International Visionary
(Washington, DC 1969)Michaelsen, K.J. Archipenko: A Study of the Early
Works, 1908–1920 (New York 1977)Michaelsen, K.J. and N. Guralnik. Alexander
Archipenko: A Centennial Tribute (Washington, D.C.–Tel Aviv–New
York 1986)Maslovs’ka, L.I. (ed). Oleksandr Arkhypenko: Al’bom
(Kyiv 1989) Barth, A. Alexander Archipenkos plastisches Oeuvre, 2 vols.
(Frankfurt–New York 1997)
Sviatoslav Hordynsky, Marko
Robert Stech