Nikolai Khardzhiev
Nikolai Ivanovich Khardzhiev (ru: Харджиев, Николай Иванович, 26 June 1903, Russia—(?) June 1996, Netherlands) was a Russian writer, literary and art collector.[1] He possessed an extensive archive and collection of Russian Avantgarde art and literature.[2]
Early life
Khardzhiev was born in Ukraine in 1903. He studied law before moving to Leningrad in 1928. Khardzhiev was especially interested in the Futurist poets, such as Mayakovsky and Khlebnikov. Through establishing contacts with the poets, artists and their families he was able to assemble a collection of documents and publications. In 1932 Khardzhiev began work on an officially-commissioned edition of Mayakovsky's work, which was published in 12 volumes in 1947.[3] Khardzhiev was admitted to the Soviet Writers' Union in 1940[3] or 1941.[4] Anna Akhmatova, the most famous Russian poet of the Soviet period, was a close friend during the war.[4] In 1953 he married for the second time, to a sculptor, Lidia Chaga.[4]
Suprematist movement
When Kazimir Malevich returned to Stalinist Russia, his works were confiscated, and he was arrested and banned from making art in 1930.[2] Khardzhiev preserved a large number of documents and memoirs associated with the avante-garde movement, and around 1,350 artworks. These included oil paintings, gouaches and drawings by Malevich; paintings by Pavel Filonov, Mikhail Larionov, Natalia Goncharova and Olga Rozanova; and important drawings by El Lissitzky.[4]
Smuggling of Nikolai Khardzhiev archive
Nikolai Khardzhiev possessed a major archive of documents, drawings and paintings by Russian Futurist artists. Its market value was estimated at around £100M.[3] In 1992 the Khardzhievs were invited by Professor Willem Weststeijn of the Slavic Institute of the University of Amsterdam to visit the university.[4] Nikolai Khardzhiev responded by offering his archive of documents to Weststeijn's institute, and his collection of artworks to the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam in exchange for Weststeijn's aid in moving the Khardzhievs and their possessions to the West.[3] The archive was inspected by art historians from the Stedelijk to authenticate the paintings; they engaged the Galerie Gmurzynska of Cologne to move the archive out of Russia.[3] The owners of the gallery, Krystyna Gmurzynska and her business partner Mathias Rastorfer, accompanied Weststeijn in 1993 to meet the Khardzhievs.[3]
The Khardzhievs arrived in Amsterdam in November 1993. According to Lidia Khardzhiev, from May 1993 Weststeijn made frequent visits to the couple to assist in packing the archive. Manuscripts, drawings, books and watercolours were stored in 280 catalogued files. These were removed from the Khardzhievs' apartment, along with their personal belongings. Lidia Khardzhiev maintained that the paintings and books were sent to the Galerie Gmurzynska while the archive remained at a "Russian safe house", where it was divided up by persons unknown.[3]
On 22 February 1994 at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport an Israeli of Russian descent was arrested and his luggage searched.[5] Part of the archive was found and confiscated. The cache contained manuscripts by the poets Khlebnikov, Mandelstam and Akhmatova and letters written by Malevich. This part of the archive was transferred to the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art.[3]
Found with the seized documents was a paragraph-long agreement between Krystyna Gmurzynska and Nikolai Khardzhiev to provide "material support" of US$2.5 million to the Khardzhievs in Amsterdam. This was witnessed by Lidia Khardzhiev, Weststeijn and Rastorfer. A second document outlined the transfer of six works by Malevich from Khardzhiev to Gmurzynska.[3]
Both Gmurzynska and Rastorfer later denied any involvement in the smuggling of the archive, stating that they had advanced a sum of money to the Khardzhievs for the couple's move.[4] Khardzhiev retained ownership of the section of the archive transferred to the State Archive, and he blocked access to the papers until 2015.[6]
On July 27, 1995, Khardzhiev made a will leaving everything to Lidia, with the instruction that she choose what part of his collection was given to the Khardzhiev-Chaga Art Foundation in Amsterdam. Lidia died in November of that year after falling down the stairs at their home.[5] In Khardzhiev's last interview, in December 1995, he said that Nicolas Iljine had approached him on behalf of the Russian authorities, trying to negotiate the return of some of his paintings or part of his archive.[4] When he died in June 1996,[3] he left his art collection to the foundation, and later the foundation and the State Archive of the Russian Federation agreed to administer Khardzhiev’s archive.[2] In 2013, many of the works from the Khardzhiev collection were included in a major retrospective on Malevich held at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.[2] A definitive catalogue of the collection was published by the Stedelijk in October 2013.[7]
References
- ↑ "Kazimir Malevich- De-Khardzhiev-Chaga collection". stedelijk.nl. Stedelijk Museum. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 Siegal, Nina. "Rare glimpse of the elusive Kazimir Malevich". nytimes.com. New York Times. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Norman, Geraldine. "A tragic flight to freedom". telegraph.co.uk. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golden, Tim. "For collector of Russian art, the end of a dream; a murky trail behind rediscovered works by Malevich". nytimes.com. New York Times. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- 1 2 Koldehoff, Stefan. "The Mysterious Malevich Donation". artknowledgenews.com (subscription needed). Art Knowledge News. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
- ↑ Wood, Tom. "A Futurist ark". newleftreview.org. New Left Review. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- ↑ "Symposium on collection transfer". stedelijk.nl. Stedelijk. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
Further reading
- Nikolaî Khardzhiev, Evgeniia Andreevna Petrova, John E Bowlt, Mark Clarence Konecny (2002). A legacy regained: Nikolai Khardzhiev and the Russian avant-garde. Palace Editions. p. 400. ISBN 3935298382.
- Geraldine Norman (23 May 1998). "A tragic flight to freedom". The Telegraph.