Not exact matches
Also in Paris during this time, was the Ukrainian - born artist Vladimir Tatlin (1885 - 1953), who went on to pioneer Constructivism, and the Russian artist Vladimir Baranoff - Rossine (1888 - 1944) whose sculpture Symphony No 1 (1913, painted wood, cardboard and crushed eggshells, Museum of Modern
Art MoMA) resembles a
junk sculpture of Alexander Archipenko (1887 - 1964).
He used ordinary objects and everyday
junk while
also employing traditional
art materials.
It was
also around this time that the Russian - American experimental sculptor Louise Nevelson (1899 - 1988) began producing her famous assemblages known as «sculptured walls», and only a few years since Jean Dubuffet (1901 - 85) had begun his own form of
junk art which had an important impact on
junk sculpture practised by Arman and others.
The latter - who in addition to achieving considerable fame as a Cubist painter, was
also an important of
Junk art - impressed Gleizes with his «readymades» series of found objects.