Skye Sherwin 

Pavel Filonov’s Shostakovich’s First Symphony: art at its most musical

This piece from 1935 reflects the artist’s theory of ‘analytical realism’, in which minutely realised, obsessively detailed individual parts form a whole
  
  

Shostakovich’s First Symphony (detail) by Pavel Filonov
Like thoughts taking shape ... Shostakovich’s First Symphony (detail; full image below) by Pavel Filonov. Photograph: Bridgeman Art Library

All in the mind

In Pavel Filonov’s response to the expressionist composer Dmitri Shostakovich’s First Symphony, the canvas swarms with abstractions. They feel like notes or beats, from which faces emerge; thoughts taking shape.

Make it new

Part of the generation of artists who came of age around 1917, he wanted to change the world and rethink art, with his obsessively detailed work.

My revolution

Taking cubism’s multiple viewpoints and futurism’s interest in movement, he developed his own theory of “analytical realism”. A mix of scientific observation and metaphysics, it led to pronouncements about “universal flowering”, where “the people” ascend to power. This is reflected in works in which minutely realised individual parts form a whole.

Banned apart

Like many artists of the revolution, by the time Filonov made this painting his work had been repressed by the state. In spite of the prohibitions placed on him, he continued to paint, before starving to death in the siege of Leningrad.

Included in Opera: Passion, Power and Politics, Victoria & Albert Museum, SW7, to 25 February

Shostakovich’s First Symphony
In full ... Shostakovich’s First Symphony. Photograph: Bridgeman Art Library
 

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