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Constructivism and Assemblage

Constructivism replaced the solid mass of traditional sculpture with open, built structures of industrial materials, while assemblage built sculpture from found objects and fragments. Together they redefined sculpture as something constructed rather than carved or modeled.

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Definition

Modern sculptural practices that build form through construction rather than carving or modeling, including Russian Constructivism's use of industrial materials and assemblage's incorporation of found objects.

Scope

Covers the constructed strand of modern sculpture: Russian Constructivism and its faktura and engineering ideals, the Cubist relief and collage origins of construction, and assemblage as the joining of found objects into sculptural wholes. Treats this as a coherent shift from mass to construction; the carving and casting crafts are handled in the materials area.

Core questions

  • How did Constructivism replace sculptural mass with open, engineered structure?
  • What did Constructivists mean by faktura, and why did materials matter?
  • How did assemblage extend collage into three dimensions?
  • How did construction and the found object challenge the definition of sculpture?

Key concepts

  • construction
  • faktura
  • the open structure
  • industrial materials
  • assemblage
  • found object

Key theories

Construction over mass
Constructivists such as Tatlin and Gabo rejected the carved or modeled solid in favor of open structures assembled from industrial materials, emphasizing real space, engineering, and the properties of the material itself.
Assemblage and the found object
Assemblage, building on Cubist collage and Dada, constructs sculpture by combining pre-existing objects and fragments, treating selection and juxtaposition as the sculptural act.

History

Constructed sculpture emerged from Picasso's Cubist reliefs and crystallized in Russian Constructivism after 1915, where Tatlin's counter-reliefs and Gabo's transparent structures treated sculpture as engineering. In the West, Dada and Surrealist found objects fed into a broader assemblage practice, consolidated by the 1961 Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Art of Assemblage.

Debates

Art versus utility in Constructivism
Whether Constructivist work should remain autonomous abstract sculpture or, as productivist theory urged, dissolve into useful design and industrial production in service of a new society.

Key figures

  • William C. Seitz
  • Christina Lodder
  • Rosalind Krauss

Related topics

Seminal works

  • lodder1983
  • seitz1961
  • krauss1977

Frequently asked questions

What is Constructivism in sculpture?
Constructivism was an early-twentieth-century movement, strongest in revolutionary Russia, that abandoned the solid carved or modeled mass in favor of open structures built from industrial materials such as metal, glass, and wood, treating the sculptor as a kind of engineer.
How does assemblage differ from Constructivism?
Both build rather than carve, but Constructivism favored abstract, often geometric structures of industrial materials, whereas assemblage typically combines recognizable found objects and fragments, emphasizing the meanings and histories the objects bring with them.

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