Description:

BURLIUK DAVID DAVIDOVICH (RUSSIAN 1882-1967), Happy New Year, 1947, watercolor, colored pencil, ink on thick paper, folded and laid on cardboard, 27 x 17.5 cm (10 2/3 x 6 8/9 in.), signed lower left

LOT NOTES
David Davidovich Burliuk, often called the Father of Futurism, was a Ukrainian futurist, neo-primitivist, illustrator and writer. Burliuk studied at the Odessa and Kazan Art Schools and at the Royal Academy in Munich from 1989 to 1904. In 1910, he and his brothers founded the futurist literary collective Hylaea, which would later be joined by Vladimir Mayakovsky. Burliuk attended art school in Odessa from 1910 to 1911, at which point he joined the artists' group Jack of Diamonds. He also attended MUZHVZ from 1911 until his expulsion in 1913. After his brother Vladimir's death in 1917, Burliuk began travelling to United States, where he would later immigrate in 1922. David Burliuk's deft assimilation of avant garde trends and varied style has made him a notable figure in the visual and literary worlds of the 20th Century. He passed away in Long Island, New York in 1967.

PROVENANCE INFORMATION
This lot comes from the collection of Viktor Kholodkov (1948-2015), who fulfilled his passion for books, avant-garde design and paper memorabilia by devoting his life to collecting and dealing of prominent works of Russian graphic art of the first half of the 20th century. The dedicated collector acquired a multitude of books and artworks throughout decades, meticulously labeling and archiving every single item. Many came directly from the most preeminent artists of the time, as well as from their families and estates. He also possessed a vast number of drawings from the famous collection of another avant-garde enthusiast, Nikolai Khardzhiev. After leaving the USSR in 1989 and settling in California, Viktor continued his work as a Soviet art dealer and critic, actively publishing various articles and contributing to several major Russian avant-garde exhibitions across the U.S., such as the 1991 Russia Under Fire in the 40s on the West Coast and the 1992 Guggenheim exhibition The Great Utopia: The Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde. Kholodkov also contributed to the archives of the biggest American institutions. His sophisticated selection of over 2000 Russian sheet music covers was acquired by The Library of Congress, and an extensive amount of material related to VKhUTEMAS is now at the J. Paul Getty Museum.

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