Nina Ilyinichna Niss-Goldman (Russian: Ни́на Ильи́нична Нисс-Го́льдман, 19 September 1892, Rostov-on-Don – 30 January 1990, Moscow) was a painter, sculptor and a teacher of Jewish origin that was one of the founding members of the Society of Artists 'The Four Arts' (1924–1931, Moscow). Nina was a member of the Society of Russian Sculptors (SRS) (1925–1932, Moscow), a member of the Moscow Union of Artists (MOSSH) since its foundation (1932) and was the most senior member of the Artists' Union of the USSR. Her brother was Russian-American writer, journalist and film producer Voldemar Ryndzune Vetluguin.
From 1920 Nina Niss-Goldman taught at VKhUTEMAS (later in 1926 re-organised into VKhUTEIN), where she received the title of professor. On the recommendation of Vladimir Favorsky in 1926, she left for a two-year scholarship trip to Italy, where she attended courses at the Roman Academy of Fine Arts.
From 1915 she began to participate in exhibitions in Moscow, the Union and abroad.
Her works can be found in numerous museums in Russia, including the collection of the Russian avant-garde of the 1920s in the Saint PetersburgRussian Museum and the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow. A bust of the poet Valery Bryusov (1924) who posed for her shortly before his death, is still commonly exhibited at exhibitions dedicated to 20th-century Russian art.
In addition to sculpture, Nina Niss-Goldman devoted herself passionately to painting. Critics greatly appreciate her still lives in oil on canvas, many of which can still be found in private collections in Russia, Italy and Germany. In 2020, the Tretyakov Gallery accepted a self-portrait of Nina Niss-Goldman (canvas, oil, 70x64 cm) as a gift from the Sovart Gallery.[5]
...sculptor Nina Niss-Goldman, who lived in Paris in 1910–1915 and frequented Elie Nadelman and Chana Orloff, was close to Alexander Archipenko and Jacques Lipchitz in her plastic experiments. Her statues and sculptures... were characterised by a plastic power that gave no reason to discriminate them as 'feminine' works.[6]
... What attracts me about her is that she is probably the only living bridge between us and the great artists of the past. When one bends down to greet Nina Ilyinichna, one almost clashes with the great Modigliani, who at that same moment was bending down to kiss his girlfriend.
It is hard to believe that Modigliani, Bourdelle, Maillol, Blok, Briusov were living people. For all of us, they are paintings, sculptures, books. Nina Ilyinichna simply and naturally conveys to us the warmth of the handshake of her great contemporaries in our present. This touch is a miracle. It gives us a living sense of history. We begin to believe in ourselves'.[7]
T. Khvostenko:
... Nina Ilyinichna Niss-Goldman, who died in 1990 at the age of 98, captured the imagination of the young people around her constantly with stories about the extraordinary details of her sculptural career.
She studied in 1908 in Paris at the famous RUSS Academy among the Russian bohemian intelligentsia, knew Bourdelle and Bonnard personally, was friends with Modigliani, as well as the later famous Sadkin, Archipenko and others.
She adored Russian poetry and was an interlocutor with Klyuev, Khlebnikov, Balmont, Yesenin, Tsvetaeva, of course, Akhmatova, as well as Blok's friend Nadezhda Pavlovich, and was able to personally listen to Blok, Vyacheslav Ivanov, Mayakovsky, Mandelstam.
She created countless portraits of several of her contemporaries and is proud that Moscow is decorated with about a dozen of her memorial sculptures and memorial plaques: Leo Tolstoy, Rachmaninoff, Botkin, Ostuzhev, Teleshov and others.[8]
...1950, 1st January. Two o'clock in the afternoon. I came from N [Nina Niss-Goldman], where I had celebrated the New Year. And what I felt when I wanted to write to Shegal appeared, asserted itself. Be what it will, but I am an artist again by the grace of God. Everything of mine has come together and went forward. All I need is a canvas. A family, I'm surrounded by the people I'm going to paint.
I broke free from the stuffy hospital walls of my room and returned to my studio. There were mistakes, and one thing that I had weakened my spirit, that my ill will had fallen asleep. Well to work. I realised once again what I had known for a long time, that N E had come into my life as an artist in this way. Her optimism in art, her assertion of creative will, to me such support, more – it is part of some inner strength that in these years so weakened in me.[9]
А. Poverin:
... I heard this story from Nina Ilyinichna Niss-Goldman, an outstanding Soviet sculptor, which is probably why it seemed to me to be carved in stone. Nina Ilyinichna's workshop was located in Verkhnyaya Maslovka. At that time, many famous Soviet sculptors lived and worked there. In general, the people I was lucky enough to communicate with at that time were fantastic. Nina Ilyinichna alone was worth something.
She studied in Paris. She spoke to Bourdelle, Despio and Picasso. She was friends with Modigliani and Zadkine. In Russia, she taught for over forty years at the VKHUTEMAS and VKHUTEIN. Many outstanding Soviet sculptors passed through her hands. She sculpted Klyuev, Bryusov and Platonov from life. She was friends with Majakovsky, Mukhina and Bruni, etc., etc.[10]
...A completely different kind of Bohemian intelligence was demonstrated by the sculptress Nina Ilyinichna Niss-Goldman, who often came to this house in the evenings. It was difficult for her to walk due to age and illness, but she lived very close to Myasnitskaya and was all too eager for new books and impressions.
Niss laconic, philosophical and mischievous, fortunately, could not even imagine what posthumous glory awaited her.
First, Dina Rubina made her the heroine of her story 'On Verkhnyaya Maslovka', and then she became a celebrity after the release of the film of the same name in 2005, starring Alisa Freindlich and Evgeny Mironov.
So earthly glory not only passes, but sometimes falls from nowhere. Nina Ilyinichna was full of self-confidence, knew her worth and in no way pursued cheap or expensive popularity. But she received it in full.[11]
Exhibitions
The total number of exhibitions in which Niss-Goldman took part include:
1924 Moscow: 26th EXHIBITION OF THE MOSCOW ARTISTS ASSOCIATION
1925 Moscow: “THE 4 ARTS” ARTISTS EXHIBITION
1926 Moscow: EXHIBITION OF PAINTING, GRAPHICS, SCULPTURE, ARCHITECTURE OF “THE 4 ARTS” SOCIETY OF ARTISTS
1927 Moscow: 2nd SCULPTURE EXHIBITION OF THE SOCIETY OF RUSSIAN SCULPTORS (ORS)
1929 Moscow: 3rd SCULPTURE EXHIBITION OF THE SOCIETY OF RUSSIAN SCULPTORS (ORS)
1933 Moscow: EXHIBITION "ARTISTS OF THE RSFSR FOR XV YEARS (1917–1932). Sculpture
1934 Moscow: EXHIBITION OF WORKS OF ARTISTS COMMANDED BY THE Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR, NARKOMPROS, "ALL-ARTIST" AND MOSSKH THROUGHOUT THE USSR IN 1933
1937 Exhibitions abroad: INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION “ART AND TECHNOLOGY IN MODERN LIFE”
1937 Moscow: MOSCOW SCULPTORS' EXHIBITION
1939 Moscow: UNION EXHIBITION OF YOUNG ARTISTS DEDICATED TO THE TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE Komsomol
1940 Byelorussian SSR: SOVIET FINE ARTS. TRAVELING EXHIBITION IN THE WESTERN REGIONS OF THE BSSR
1940 Moscow: SCULPTURE EXHIBITION OF THE MOSCOW UNION OF SOVIET ARTISTS
1945 Auth. Rep., territories and regions of the RSFSR: EXHIBITION OF ARTISTIC WORKS FOR THE CONFERENCE OF THE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE USSR ON THE STUDY OF THE PRODUCTIVE FORCES OF THE MOLOTOV REGION
Brother – Voldemar Ryndzune Vetluguin (1897–1953) – writer, publicist, journalist; author of the works "Adventurers of the Civil War", "The Third Russia", secretary and translator of Isadora Duncan and Sergei Yesenin. In exile after the revolution.
Daughter – Niss Aleksandrovna Pekareva (née Goldman) (1913–1984), architect, author of numerous articles and monographs on the history and theory of architecture, including "I. A. Fomin" (1953), "New Kakhovka" (1958), "Moscow Metro" (1958), "Elektrostal" (1962), "State Kremlin Palace" (photo album, 1965–1978, numerous reprints), "M. V. Posokhin: Popular Architect of the USSR" (1985),[13] etc. Member of the Union of Architects of the USSR.
Son-in-law – Alexander Vasilyevich Pekarev (1905–1978) – architect, sculptor. Member of the USSR Union of Architects. Member of the Union of Artists of the USSR. Chief sculptor of VDNKh.
Niece – Galina Davydovna Tyagai (1922–2006) – orientalist, specialist in the history of Korea and the problems of the national liberation movement in Asian countries. Doctor of Historical Sciences.
Mentions
"House on Maslovka" is a documentary film directed by Sergei Loginov (1990).
"On Verkhnyaya Maslovka" is a story by Dina Rubina. – ISBN 978-5-04-118844-3 – The story is set in Moscow in the City of Artists. The prototype of the "old woman" was Nina Ilyinichna Niss-Goldman, who occupied studio 11 in building 1.
"On Upper Maslovka Street" is a 2005 film based on the story of the same name by Dina Rubina, starring Alisa Freindlikh and Evgeny Mironov. Filmed directly inside the City of Artists.
"The Four Arts" is an artistic association that existed in Moscow and Leningrad in 1924–1931.
"City of Artists" is an architectural complex on the street. Verkhnyaya Maslovka in Moscow.
The "List of Artists of the Silver Age" includes painters, graphic artists and sculptors who worked in Russia in the years 1900–1930 and who were members of various artistic groups and associations.
"Evenings on Maslovka near Dinamo." — ISBN 5-94299-021-2 – two-volume book with the memoirs of the artist and restorer Tatyana Vasilievna Khvostenko, Olympia Press, Moscow 2003.
N. I. Niss-Goldman on the website "Maslovka. City of Artists".
10,000 best artists in the world (18th–21st centuries).
^Надежда Удальцова. Жизнь русской кубистки: Дневники, статьи, воспоминания. // Литературно-художественное агентство «RA», 1994]. — М. : RA, 1994. — с. 82–83. — ISBN 5-85164-026–х