[1] She went on to study at the People's Art School in Vitebsk, Belarus, and soon became a teacher there, together with Marc Chagall, El Lissitzky, and Kazimir Malevich.
[4][5] She also took part designing new version of futuristic opera Victory over the Sun.
[3][2] In the 1980s a large number of works attributed to her appeared on the European art market.
[3][6] Her works are in collections of the Seattle Art Museum and the Moderna Museet, Stockholm.
[7] Australian poet Clive James wrote a poem about Kogan, titled "Nina Kogan's Geometrical Heaven":[8] Two of her little pictures grace my walls: Suprematism in a special sense, With all the usual bits and pieces flying Through space, but carrying a pastel-tinged Delicacy to lighten the strict forms Of that hard school and blow them all sky-high, Splinters and stoppers from the bombing of An angel’s boudoir.