Born in to the family of a physician, Kogan attended high school in Mogilev and then studied at the historical and philological faculty of the Moscow University graduating in 1896. During his studies he was introduced to Marxist ideas and polemicized in publications against
Yuly Aykhenvald and
Mikhail Gerschenson and others. With
Konstantin Balmont,
Valery Bryusov and
Vladimir Fritsche, Kogan founded the Circle of Friends of Western European Literature in 1894. He then taught in Moscow at various schools, including the Moscow Philharmonic Society School. He converted to the Russian Orthodox Church so that he could become a professor. However, the Minister of Education
Nikolai Pavlovich Bogolepov, contrary to the law, did not allow him to prepare for a professorship. In 1909 Kogan went to St. Petersburg and in 1910 he was elected private lecturer at the Chair of Germanic-Romance Philology at the
St. Petersburg State University. In 1917 Kogan returned to Moscow and taught at Moscow University after the
October Revolution. In 1921 he became a professor of Germanic-Romance philology there. He also became president of the State Academy of Arts of the RSFSR in Moscow, founded in 1921, which pursued similar goals to the Bauhaus and existed until 1930. He was an employee of the People's Commissariat of Education of the RSFSR and served as chairman of the artistic section of the State Academic Council. ==References==