The halls feature the cubist Compositional Portrait (1921; Russian Museum), the expressive composition Head in Iron (1924; Tula Museum of Fine Arts), the monumental sculpture Oktyabrenok (1924; Tretyakov Gallery), the life-size sculpture Motherhood. Black Soil (1929; Russian Museum), which Sandomirskaya considered her greatest achievement, as well as other works from the 1920s to 1960s. A special space is devoted to drawings from various years.
Alongside Sandomirskaya's works, works from the collection of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts are on display, clearly demonstrating the exhibition's heroine's connection to the art of other nations and eras. These include paintings by European modernist artists and sculpture from African countries.
While Sandomirskaya's legacy remains less well-known to the general public than that of other Russian avant-garde artists, the originality of her artistic language allows her work to be considered on par with the greatest phenomena of 20th century art.
Participants: The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, the P.M. Dogadin Astrakhan State Art Gallery, the Bryansk Regional Art Museum and Exhibition Center, the Vologda Regional Art Gallery, the Historical Museum, the Russian Museum, the State Tretyakov Gallery, the V.P. Sukachev Irkutsk Regional Art Museum, the Kaluga Museum of Fine Arts, the S.D. Erzya Mordovian Republican Museum of Fine Arts, the Museum of Fine Arts of the Republic of Karelia, the Perm State Art Gallery, the Samara Regional Art Museum, the Tula Museum Association (branch – the Tula Museum of Fine Arts), the State Museum Association "Artistic Culture of the Russian North" (Arkhangelsk), the Yaroslavl Art Museum, the National Gallery of Armenia, and private collectors.
Press release of The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts