But while Western fashions of the 1920s attempted to encapsulate a fashion moment, Constructivist designers had their hearts set on something altogether more ambitious. Prozodezhda were intended to be the clothing not just of the present, but of the future—a kind of anti-fashion that approached timelessness.
Even their name suggests this political aim, taking its inspiration from the revolutionary motto of the Russian avant-garde: “V proizvodstvo!”, or “Into Production!” Eventually, they hoped, all design would be Constructivist, with the impractical art and design of yesteryear relegated to museums. While Popova and Stepanova concentrated on the reinvention of textiles, fellow Constructivists Aleksandr Rodchenko and Vladimir Tatin were furnishing proletarian kitchens with redesigned stoves and pots. In applied arts, the theory went, the masses could interact directly with concepts: What better way to communicate ideals to workers than through things they could hold, touch, wear and, above all, use?
Unfortunately, workers seldom got the opportunity to do so—and when they did, they didn’t always like the goods that were on offer. As a result of their costume designs, Stepanova and Popova were engaged as textile designers in Moscow’s First State Textile Print Factory in the late fall of 1923. In a sense, it was a canny hire: They’d become famous, even notorious, across the city for their artistic credentials and avant-garde theatrical designs. On arrival, they insisted on a hands-on approach to textile production and design, encompassing even being present in the laboratory that produced the dyes.
But though they saw the hire as an opportunity to propagate their views on design, they’d been brought in by the Factory to help boost sales, which necessitated some compromise. They struggled, therefore, to communicate the subtleties of their designs to management. Humiliatingly, their use of compasses and rulers, supposed to eliminate any trace of human handiwork in favor of industrial glory, was misinterpreted as an inability to draw.
The public were used to flowers, not triangles, factory management said, and it was worried that they would not respond positively to these radical designs. On top of that, what little factory equipment on offer was out-of-date, and dyes and fabrics increasingly hard to come by. A few dozen fabrics were designed, produced and sold, but the experiment was not especially successful for either the factory or the designers.
Stepanova and Popova were highbrow thinkers, with a dream of dressing the socialist masses in puritanical silhouettes. But their ideal customers proved far from enthusiastic about such ascetic, radical garments, which downplayed their abilities to express themselves as individuals. In the end, the experiment failed and prozodezhda was relegated to the history books. They had proven impractical, unpopular and expensive to mass-produce: the literal opposite of everything the Constructivists had hoped to achieve.