He travelled to Italy, France,
Egypt,
Greece, and Germany. During the
Russian Revolution of 1905 Konenkov was with the workers on the barricades, soon after creating portraits of the heroes of the rebellion in
Moscow. When Konenkov visited the house of the art collector
Ivan Morozov, an eye-witness account says he was very dismissive: He claimed that the works by
Maurice Denis,
Manet,
Degas and
Aristide Maillol were rubbish. Morozov replied that he just loved Konenkov, who replied that he did not care. When Morozov showed Konenkov works by
Vrubel and
Victor Borisov-Musatov, which he praised, but questioned why they were being hidden in Morozov's bedroom. Konenkov sold three sculptures to Morozov before the war: A pair entitled
Torso made of marble with one created by Richard Guinot, Maillol's assistant, and Konenkov wooden carving entitled
Young Woman. During the war he sold Morozov two more. Konenkov supported the
Russian Revolution of 1917. Following the
Bolshevik seizure of power Konenkov started work for
Narkompros, the new People's Commissariat for Enlightenment. In this capacity he returned to the Morozov mansion to deliver a preservation order for Ivan Morozov's art collection. ==Work in US==