Pavel Tchelitchew

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Pavel Tchelitchew
1898-1957
Male Dancer Grabbing a Woman
20th century
Pen and black ink and gray wash on paper.
12 3/16 x 8 1/4 inches (310 x 210 mm)
The Joseph F. McCrindle Collection.
2009.313
Notes: 

Pavel Tchelitchew, a Russian-born American surrealist, was a highly accomplished draftsmen and figurative artist, known both for his hallucinatory paintings and whimsical stage designs. In 1919, when he was twenty-one, Tchelitchew designed his first production, The Geisha, an operetta by Ivan Caryl (1861-1921) for a theater in Kiev. From Kiev, the artist traveled to Constantinople, where he designed six ballets for the company of Victor Zimine. Tchelitchew next traveled to Berlin, quickly securing a series of design commissions for both theater and ballet productions. His work on the Russian Romantic Theater's production of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's (1844-1908) The Wedding Feast of Boyar (1922), in which he combined constructivist geometries with Russian folk fabric patterns--captured the attention of Serge Diaghilev (1872-1929), who commissioned Tchelitchew to create a designs for the Ballets Russes in Paris. Though the commission did not come to fruition until six years later, the result -- Ode (1928) -- represented a radical breakthrough for Tchelitchew. In particular, Tchelitchew developed a keen sense for light and transparency, using luminous cellulose materials for both the costumes and sets. The artist's interest in translucency--also a hallmark of his paintings and drawings--would significantly inform all his designs moving forward. In this undated costume study from the McCrindle collection, Tchelitchew depicts a male and female dancer locked in a dramatic pose, with the man grasping the woman's wrist as she appears to swoon before him.

Provenance: 
Coll. Sarah H. Kelley; Joseph F. McCrindle, New York (McCrindle collection no. A1110).
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