"Morning Work" (1960s) by Alexander Vladimirovich Ishin is a black-and-white gouache painting that compresses an entire industrial city into a stark, graphic rhythm. Factories, trucks, and workers are flattened into bold silhouettes, each element locked into place like parts of a machine.
The perspective is deliberately distorted—buildings tilt, roads bend unnaturally—but everything orbits a single idea: coordinated labour. Smokestacks rise behind the city blocks, while swirling clouds and mountain ridges inject a hallucinatory motion into the background. Trucks and workers at street level are reduced to icons. They don’t show detail, but they do show movement.
Every line follows the logic of the composition. Light and shadow are engineered for contrast and control. Despite the image’s sharpness, there’s no disorder. The city feels synchronised, humming with shared purpose. It’s industrial, but not dystopian."
This kind of clarity likely traces back to Ishin’s 1965 trip to Norilsk, where the raw northern landscape shaped much of his early work. Though he later moved toward a more figurative realism, early pieces like *Morning Work* pull from the visual language of naïve art.
Alexander Vladimirovich Ishin (1941–2015) was a Moscow-based painter and theatre artist. He studied at the Moscow Secondary Art School and the Surikov State Art Institute, graduating in 1966. His career spanned painting, graphics, mosaics, and public art. He served as Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts at RICTRI and later as Rector of the Russian State Specialized Academy of Arts. Recognised as an Honoured Artist in 2000 and a People’s Artist in 2011, Ishin works are in major museum collections, including the Tretyakov Gallery and the Russian Museum.