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Two Manifestos: The Influence of Italian Futurism in Russia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2021
Extract
From the very beginning of the Futurist movement in Italy in 1909, Russian artists, poets, and critics were well informed about the movement's manifestos and general development. Strong schools of Futurist poetry and painting quickly came into being. By 1913, Russian Futurism was already in full force. In that year, on December 2 and 3, the first Futurist theatre productions took place: Vladimir Mayakovsky's Vladimir Mayakovsky and Alexander Kruchenykh's Victory Over the Sun (T52). However, Mayakovsky and Kruchenykh were not familiar with the first Futurist manifesto devoted to theatre: the Variety Theatre Manifesto (September 29, 1913). Their plays and productions were influenced by general Futurist principles, rather than a specific theatrical theory.
- Type
- Historical Manifestos
- Information
- The Drama Review , Volume 19 , Issue 4: New Performance and Manifestos , December 1975 , pp. 88 - 94
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1975 The Drama Review
References
The title sketch by Yuri Annenkov was done for The First Distiller, 1919.
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