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ЗРЕЛИЩА
Editor
Lev Kolpakchi
Circulation
6,000[1]
First issue
May 1, 1922; 102 years ago (1922-05-01)
Final issue
June 1, 1924 (1924-06-01)
Country
Russia
Based in
Moscow
ZRELISHCHA (Russian: ЗРЕЛИЩА – Spectacles) was a Russian language Soviet illustrated weekly theatre journal. It was originallyublished in Moscow from May to August 1922 under the name "Hermitage" (Russian: "Эрмитаж") (15 editions); from August 1922 to June 1924 (89 editions) it was known as Zrelishch.[2][3] The journal published a chronicle of cultural events in Moscow with a focus on theatre, dance, opera, circus and music-hall. The journal regularly featured critical reviews, correspondence and discussion on avant-garde cultural activities in the Soviet Union and abroad. Edited by theatre critic Lev Kolpakchi,[2][4] the journal was associated with the work of V. Ardov, B. Bebutov, O. Brik, P. Markov, V. Meyerhold, S. Yutkevich, A. Fevralsky, B. Arvatov, S, Tretyakov, and others. Many writers of the journal published under pseudonyms. The journal editors expressed affiliation to the Left Front of the Arts (Russian:"Левый фронт искусств") and the journal served as forum for the discussion and critique of Constructivist theatre, Formalism and the methods of dialectical materialism. The journal's position in regards to revolutionary cultural production, as set out in one of the first issues, was the "study the material characteristics and methods for its organization, the creation of a science of art, the transformation of art into a scientifically-organized mode of production."
^"Galadzhev, AnnenkovZRELISHCHA ("Spectacles"). Theater magazine No. 59 , et al.; Kamensky, et al.) Kolpakchi, Lev (Editor), Russian Art and Books, Imperial, Soviet and Emigrant Paintings, Graphics, Prints, Illustrated Russian Books & Magazines, Sheet Music, Ephemera, Photography, Posters, Autographs, etc. , Avant-garde Antiquarian Ballet Russe Bilibin California Chagall Cold War Constructivism Constructivist Coronation Filonov Futurism Klutsis Leon Bakst Lissitzky Malevich Meyerhold Propaganda Rodchenko Royalty San Diego Stenberg Tatlin VKHUTEMAS". www.russianartandbooks.com. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
^ abТеатральная энциклопедия. Том 2/Глав. ред. П. А. Марков - М.: Советская энциклопедия, 1963. - 1216 стб. с илл., 14 л. илл.
^Russian Modernism: The Collections of the Getty Research Institute for the History of Art and the Humanities, I. Getty Publications. 1997. ISBN 9780892363858. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
ZRELISHCHA (Russian: ЗРЕЛИЩА – Spectacles) was a Russian language Soviet illustrated weekly theatre journal. It was originallyublished in Moscow from May...
contributed the article "Kinematografichesky naturshchik" to the first issue of Zrelishcha in 1922. Among his other notable students were Vsevolod Pudovkin, Boris...