The Stedelijk has in its collection a number of key-works by Malevich from this very enigmatic stylistic development of his oeuvre. With Bather we own an icon from his fauvist — primitive period. Woodcutter is a masterwork from his cubo-futurist period and Englishman in Moscow belongs to the top works from his a-logic phase.
Our collection has the strongest representation of geometric abstract works of Malevich in the world: from the Suprematist works (including 5 (!) from the O.lOexhibition), to the most cosmic oriented abstract works that herald the transition to the “Architectons“ with the crosses, the floating yellow plane and the three thin white abstracts. This is a unique ensemble of paintings brought together by Malevich in an exhibition in Berlin (1926) to show the world his artistic developments that he thought would conquer the European art world.
We although know better by now.
Malevich got stuck because in the political conditions of the late 1920s and returned to Russia, never to come back to the West. But this certainly did not mean the end of his artistic development. Back in Russia under the harsh conditions of a dictatorship that wanted to also dictate the artistic developments, he returned to the figurative.
Intentionally or not, he produced one of the most mysterious twists ever in the oeuvre of an artist. Almost all examples of this late period are to be found in Russian collections and are therefore a rarity in the West.
We experience the lack of a painting from this period — as in the Khardzhiev Collection that is managed by us there are many drawings from this time- as a very great loss. In order to be able to tell the story of one of the most beautiful oeuvres of the twentieth century on the wails of our museum, we want to uo everything possible to accomplish the acquisitions oi Portrait of E. Yakolevna. The intention is not only to acquire “an example of a late work” but in our eyes an equally strong icon from this missed period just as the aforementioned masterworks that represent the different stylistic periods.
To our knowledge, the painting Portrait of E. Yakolevna has first been illustrated in the groundbreaking article Suprematist Embroidered Ornament by Malevich specialist Charlotte Douglas in the American magazine The Art Journal, spring 1995, p. 45.
The work is included in the catalog raisonne by Andrei Nakov on the oeuvre of Malevich from 2002 (PS-253, p. 403). While in several portraits from this period Suprematist details appear in the clothing of the portrayed characters, the portrait of E. Yakolevna stands out because the sitter draws attention to the object in her right hand (seen by the onlooker), which is described as a Suprematistic handbag.
For Charlotte Douglas this object was the reason for illustrating the painting, as her article explains that Malevich had already shown two Suprematist shawls and a cushion in the well known 0:10 exhibition from 15 December in Petrograd. He showed for the first time in public his Suprematist paintings already in November 1915 in Moscow, in an exhibition of modern decorative art in the K. Lemercier Gallery.