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Did you know that body art was invented by a Russian artist over 100 years ago?

Public domain / Legion Media
Two men with painted faces stroll leisurely along Kuznetsky Most Street – that's the scene that stunned passersby witnessed in September 1913. The troublemakers were artist Mikhail Larionov and poet Konstantin Bolshakov.

Larionov had a green circle and yellow rays of light on his right cheek, while Bolshakov had blue and red stripes and dots on his right cheek, neck and collar. Just as the townspeople recovered from their antics, the artist appeared at the ‘Pink Lantern’ poetry café, his face painted black. Then, with poet Ilya Zdanevich, he wrote a manifesto in which he called face painting "new folk treasures".

"We loudly called for life and life invaded art; it's time for art to invade life. Face painting is the beginning of this invasion."

Archive photo

The artist believed men should weave gold threads into their hair, shave off one mustache or half their beard and paint designs on their legs. And women should paint their chests.

Mikhail Larionov "Radiant landscape", 1912
Russian museum

Moscow newspapers reported on new walks open to everyone, where artists would paint people's faces. They also wrote about women who went to the Futurist Larionov, offering themselves as models, so he could paint the body parts specified in the manifestos. They even described his most successful works: "Her deep décolleté and shoulder were completely covered in a radiant pattern."