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  1. Nikolai Nikolajewitsch Punin war ein russischer Kunsthistoriker und Schriftsteller. Punin lebte von 1926 bis 1938 mit der berühmten russischen Dichterin Anna Achmatowa zusammen. Seit 1918 war er einer der Organisatoren des Systems der Kunsterziehung und Museumsarbeit in der UdSSR. Er ist Verfasser verschiedener Werke zur Geschichte ...

  2. Nikolay Nikolayevich Punin (Russian: Никола́й Никола́евич Пу́нин; November 28 [O.S. December 11] 1888 – August 21, 1953) was a Russian art scholar and writer. He edited several magazines, such as Izobrazitelnoye Iskusstvo among others, and was also co-founder of the Department of Iconography in the State ...

  3. Nikolai Nikolajewitsch Punin ( russisch Николай Николаевич Пунин; wiss. Transliteration Nikolaj Nikolaevič Punin; geboren am 16. November 1888 in Helsingfors (Helsinki), Großfürstentum Finnland, Russisches Kaiserreich; gestorben am 21.

  4. 12. Dez. 2023 · Abstract Throughout his life, the art-critic, Nikolai Punin (1888–1953) was a great admirer of Paul Cezanne. He believed that this leader of French modernism had the power to inspire avant-garde artists in Russia, encouraging them to break free from accepted academic rules and limitations.

    • Natalia Murray
  5. 30. Sept. 2011 · Im letzten Tagebucheintrag des Kunsthistorikers Nikolai Punin im Belagerungswinter 1941 heißt es: „Herr rette uns… wir gehen zugrunde. Aber Seine Größe ist so unversöhnlich, wie die Sowjetmacht...

  6. Nikolai Punin (1888–1953) still remains an enigma both in Russia and the west, perceived by many as a ‘red commissar’, being the right hand of Anatoly Lunacharsky.1 Punin’s role in defining post-revolutionary art and his support for avant-garde artists (especially the Futurists) are much better known than his contribution to the ...

  7. 23. März 2017 · Art scholar and writer Nikolai Punin was a shaping force behind the 1932 exhibition of post-revolutionary art that inspired our exhibition. Once an esteemed champion of the avant-garde, Punin ended his life as prisoner of the Soviet state – a victim of Stalin's brutal clampdown on artistic freedom.