Kliment Nikolaevich Red'ko or Redko (, , Klyment Mykolayovych Redko), 15 (27) October 1897 - 18 February 1956) was a Ukrainian-Russian painter-scientist, avant-garde artist (Constructivist, Projectionist, Suprematist), graphic artist.
Kliment Red'ko was born in Kholm, Russian Empire (now Cheà Âm, Poland).
In 1910âÂÂ14 he studied at the Icon Painting School of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra.
In 1918âÂÂ19 he studied at Kiev Art Academy (KKHI).
In 1919âÂÂ20 Red'ko studied in the studio of Aleksandra Ekster along with students Solomon Nikritin and Nina Genke-Meller. During that time he participated in decorating the streets of Kiev and Odessa for Revolution festivities, in the abstract style together with Ekster and Genke-Meller.
In 1920âÂÂ22 he studied painting at the Moscow Higher Artistic-Technical Workshops (VKhUTEMAS) in the class of Wassily Kandinsky.
In 1922 he participated in an exhibition of the Museum of Painterly Culture (MSCHK) in Moscow, together with Kazimir Malevich, Nikritin and Alexander Tyshler. In the same year Red'ko wrote the Manifesto of Electroorganism.
From 1923 to 1924 Red'ko, together with Nikritin, developed his theories of Electroorganism and Luminism. Red'ko started a scientific trend in art which he named Electroorganism as a reaction to Constructivism.
In 1926 he had a solo exhibition in Moscow.
In 1928âÂÂ30 he had solo exhibitions in Paris.
In 1933 he had personal exhibition in Moscow.
In 1941 he worked on the design of posters for the news agency TASS.
Red'ko died in Moscow.