Aleksei Mikhailovich Gan (Russian: Алексей Михайлович Ган; born Imberkh; 1887[1] or 1893[2] – 8 September, 1942[1][2]) was a Russian anarchist and later Marxist avant-garde artist, art theorist and graphic designer. Gan was a key figure in the development of Constructivism after the Russian Revolution.[3]
Gan was the first to write on art in the anarchist newspaper Anarkhiia (Anarchy) when it introduced an art section in early 1918.[5]
In March 1921, Gan was one of the seven artists, including Alexander Rodchenko and his wife Varvara Stepanova, who announced themselves as the First Working Group of Constructivists.[6] The group rejected fine art in favour of graphic design, photography, posters, and political propaganda.[7] Gan collaborated with Aleksandr Rodchenko and Varvara Stepanova on a Constructivist manifesto in 1922,[8] and published his own pamphlet Konstruktivism in the same year.[9] He also founded the first Soviet film journal, Kino-Fot (or Kinofot), in 1922.[10]
^Romberg, Kristin (2019). Gan's constructivism: aesthetic theory for an embedded modernism. Oakland, California: University of California Press. ISBN9780520298538.
^Nina Gourianova, The Aesthetics of Anarchy : Art and Ideology in the Early Russian Avant-Garde