Ilya Repin. Grigori Sternin
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Название: Ilya Repin

Автор: Grigori Sternin

Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing

Жанр: Иностранные языки

Серия: Best of

isbn: 978-1-78310-185-6

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ and watercolour on paper, 61 × 52 cm.

      The Russian Museum, St Petersburg.

      Diego Velázquez, Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1650.

      Oil on canvas, 140 × 120 cm.

      Doria Pamphilj Gallery, Rome.

      The Archdeacon, 1877.

      Oil on canvas, 124 × 96 cm.

      The Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow.

      Édouard Manet, Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets, 1872.

      Oil on canvas, 55.5 × 40.5 cm.

      Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

      Portrait of Vera Repina, the Artist’s Wife, 1876.

      Oil on canvas, 59 × 49 cm.

      The Russian Museum, St Petersburg.

      Repin’s contemporaries remarked more than once on his special ability to capture everyday peasant life in his art. Kramskoi wrote to Stasov in December 1876: “Repin is capable of depicting the Russian peasant exactly as he is. I know many artists who have painted peasants, some of them very well, but none of them ever came close to what Repin does.”[3] Much later, in 1908, Leo Tolstoy remarked that Repin “depicts the life of the people much better than any other Russian artist”.[4] Such remarks are frequent in critical articles and commentaries of the time on the Itinerants’ exhibitions.

      Repin’s reputation was founded on his Barge Haulers, the artist’s thoughts on life in the Russian countryside after the reforms of the 1860s and on the lot of peasants who had to leave the land to take on seasonal work. However, this early canvas, in spite of the fact that it was based on preparatory work in open air, still shows a certain contradiction between the artist’s desire to remain true to life and his rationalistic approach to the composition of the picture which consequently acquired a somewhat spectacular quality. In the Chuguyev and Moscow years, the peasant theme, at first a simple expression of the artist’s social orientation, became an integral part of his realism.

      In 1877, Repin conceived a multi-figure composition representing the scene of a religious procession. He was attracted to this subject primarily because of the opportunity it afforded to depict a multitude of people of diverse character and appearance. The content of this composition and the complicated process involved in its completion will be discussed in more detail below. As a preliminary study, Repin painted a portrait of Ivan Ulanov, the archdeacon of Chuguyev. The result was a work far superior to what was usually achieved in such studies. Repin’s Archdeacon was soon shown at an Itinerants’ Society exhibition where it was highly praised.

      Repin’s contemporaries were astonished by the amazingly plastic quality of the picture and the artist’s ability to reproduce the vital force of human flesh. Repin himself saw in it “the echo of a pagan priest”, the “pagan” element completely dominating the picture. Archdeacon undoubtedly betrayed his knowledge of Western European art. One needs to think not of the French Impressionists – the aim of the painting is diametrically opposed to the tenets of French Impressionist art – but rather of the great masters of the seventeenth century, above all, Rembrandt and Velazquez. The artist’s desire to portray a certain type of man remained linked to the essence of the model. The strength of the living energy conveyed places the portrait of Ivan Ulanov on the borderline between art and action itself. One has the impression that the irrational elemental nature depicted is barely constrained by the artist’s wilful act of creation. While admiring Repin’s skills, contemporaries noted the awesome, almost magical power of the image. The flourish with which this portrait was executed, intimates not only the boldness of the great artist, but also some sort of frenzied invocation, the anger of the animal-tamer. The artistic power of Repin’s Archdeacon has something of the expressivity of a man-made idol. The work provoked the following comment from the composer Modest Mussorgsky, who perceived the elemental forces contained within the archdeacon’s figure: “What fearsome sweeps of the brush, what an abundance of space!”[5] This “pagan” motif probably never reoccurred with such consistent force in Repin’s work. But it is present in many of his ideas, reflecting an important aspect of the artist’s thoughts about Russia. In these thoughts two elements dominate, and both vie and interact with each other. One is a delight in the deep, primordial, “earthy” force of Russian reality; the other an awareness of the conflict between that force and the spiritual ideals of the age. In fact, Repin’s treatment of the peasant theme best illustrates this.

      Storm on the Volga, 1871–1891.

      Oil on canvas, 55 × 102 cm.

      The Russian Museum, St Petersburg.

      Repin travelled many different artistic roads in his attempts to grasp life in the Russian countryside after Alexander II’s reforms. He never lost touch with the people, with the social and moral outlook of the Russian peasant. In fact, this involvement was characteristic of the Itinerants as a body. Repin’s conceptions of epic scenes and vast multi-figure compositions are always accompanied by a desire to incorporate different typical characters.

      The artist was intensively seeking an image of his Russia – a Russia which lived in the expectation of divine benevolence. It was this innate feature of the popular consciousness which he tried to come to grips with. The Revealed Icon, The Miraculously Created Icon and A Religious Procession are the names Repin gives these different versions of his concept, each time linking – and this is very significant – the religious, ritual side of public life with historical and cultural symbolic meanings. The general narrative and compositional scheme at once took on a certain dramatic aspect: he wanted to show the different attitudes of the people towards the miracle-working icon at the head of the procession. This dominates the preliminary sketches for the canvas. Later on, however, the concept seems to have dictated the very process of its realisation, and forced the artist to change his original scheme. Thus two versions arose, differing both in form and in content.

      Vassili Grigorievitch Perov, Troika (Apprentices Fetch Water), 1866.

      Oil on canvas, 123.5 × 167.5 cm.

      The Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow.

      Barge Haulers on the Volga, 1870–1873.

      Oil on canvas, 131.5 × 281 cm.

      The Russian Museum, St Petersburg.

      Portrait of Leo Tolstoy, 1887.

      Oil on canvas, 124 × 88 cm.

      The Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow.

      Ivan Kramskoi, Portrait of Leo Tolstoy, 1873.

      Oil on canvas, 98 × 79.5 cm.

      The Tretyakov State Gallery, Moscow.

СКАЧАТЬ



<p>3</p>

Ivan Kramskoy’s Letters, vol. 2, Moscow, 1937, p. 74 (in Russian).

<p>4</p>

“From Makovsky’s Memories of Yasnaya Poliana”, Problems of Literature, № 8, 1978, p. 188 (in Russian).

<p>5</p>

Modest Mussorgsky’s Letters and Documents, Moscow, 1932, p. 372 (in Russian).