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Nadezhda Udaltsova

Nadezhda Andreevna Udaltsova was a Russian and Soviet artist, painter and teacher. A member of the Russian avant-garde, Udaltsova was a representative of the Cubist, Cubo-Futurism and Suprematist art movements.

Early life and education
Nadezhda Andreevna Prudkovskaia () was born on in Orel, Orlovsky Uyezd (present-day Oryol Oblast, Russia) to Andrei Timofeevich Prudkovsky, an army general, and Vera Nikolaevna Prudkovsky (née Choglokova). In 1891, aged six, Udaltsova and her family moved to Moscow, where she graduated from high school and began her artistic career. In September 1905 Udaltsova enrolled in the art school run by Konstantin Yuon and Ivan Dudin, where she studied for two years and met fellow-students Vera Mukhina, Liubov Popova, and Aleksander Vesnin. In the spring of 1908 she traveled to Berlin and Dresden, and upon her return to Russia, she unsuccessfully applied for admission to the Moscow Institute of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture. In 1910–11, Udaltsova studied at several private studios, among them Vladimir Tatlin's. In 1912–13 she and Popova traveled to Paris to continue their studies under the tutelage of Henri Le Fauconnier, Jean Metzinger and André Segonzac at Académie de La Palette. Udaltsova returned to Moscow in 1913 and worked in Vladimir Tatlin's studio together with Popova, Vesnin, and others. ==Career==
Career
Cubism and Cubo-Futurism Udaltsova's professional debut was as a participant in a Jack of Diamonds exhibition in Moscow in the winter of 1914. Revolution Like many of her avant-garde contemporaries, Udaltsova embraced the October Revolution. In 1917, she was elected to the Club of the Young Leftist Federation of the Professional Union of Artists and Painters and began work in various state cultural institutions, including the Moscow Proletkult. In 1918, she joined the Free State Studios, first working as Malevich's assistant, and then heading up her own studio. She also collaborated with Aleksei Gan, Aleksei Morgunov, Aleksandr Rodchenko and Malevich on a newspaper entitled Anarkhiia (Anarchy). Fauvism and a return to the figurative In the early 1920s, Udaltsova's work began to show a turn away from the radical avant-garde and a sensibility more aligned with artists associated with the Jack of Diamonds, among them Ilya Mashkov, Petr Konchalovsky and Aristarkh Lentulov, exhibiting her Fauvist portraits and landscapes alongside them at the Vkhutemas "Exhibition of Paintings" of 1923 and also at the Venice "Biennale" of 1924. She also continued to teach, including instruction in textile design at Vhkutemas and the Textile Institute in Moscow from 1920 until 1930. Under the influence of Drevin, Udaltsova returned to nature and began painting landscapes. Between 1926 and 1934 they traveled widely, painting the Ural and Altai Mountains, as well as landscapes in Armenia and Central Asia. From 1927 to 1935, she contributed to national and international exhibitions and participated with Drevin in joint exhibitions at the Russian Museum (1928) and in Erevan, Armenia (1934). In 1933, Udaltsova's contributions to the exhibition of "Artists of the RSFSR Over the Last Fifteen Years" was publicly criticized for so-called "formalist tendencies." ==Repression==
Repression
On 17 January 1938, Udaltsova's husband Aleksandr Drevin was arrested by the NKVD as part of the Great Purge Latvian Operation. Drevin was executed in on 26 February 1938. Udaltsova became blacklisted from the Soviet art world. In 1945, Udaltsova was allowed a sole show at the Moscow Union of Soviet Artists. Following Stalin's death, Udaltsova contributed to a group exhibition at Moscow's House of the Artist in October 1958. ==Personal life==
Personal life
In 1908, Udaltsova married the historian Alexander Udaltsov but later divorced. In 1919, Udaltsova married the Latvian painter Aleksandr Drevin. ==Legacy==
Legacy
The Udaltsova crater on Venus is named after her. == References ==
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