Kino-Fot

The contributors included Vladimir Mayakovsky, Dziga Vertov and Lev Kuleshov.[1] It was, for a while, the principal journal of the emerging cinematic industry in the Soviet Union.[2] The magazine is credited for being an avant-garde influence for the creative flow the 1920s, bringing new abstract photomontage and typographic designs.[3] The first issue contained Vertov's statement "We: Variant of a Manifesto" which commenced with a distinction between "kinoks" and other approaches to the emergent cinematic industry: Hyppolite Sokolov wrote those introductory lines : "Cinema - a new philosophy.[5] This issue included drawings by Varvara Stepanova, a drawing by Alexander Rodchenko of a proposed building for the All-Russian Congress of Soviets and an article by him about Charlie Chaplin.
RussianAleksei GanVladimir MayakovskyDziga VertovLev KuleshovSoviet UnionesperantoH.G. WellsVarvara StepanovaAlexander RodchenkoAll-Russian Congress of SovietsCharlie ChaplinKino-PravdaList of avant-garde magazinesConstructivist art movementBoris ArvatovWerner GraeffErnő KállaiEl LissitzkyHans RichterStenberg BrothersAlexander VesninConstructivist International5x5=25, Moscow 1921First Russian Art Exhibition, Berlin 1922Figurative ConstructivismHungarian ActivismProductivist artBritish Constructivists