PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma, Featured Paintings in Detail

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Transcript of PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma, Featured Paintings in Detail

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma

Featured Paintings in Detail

Music by Alexander Borodin Performed by Natasha Morozova, Fly Away On The Wings Of The Wind

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBathing of the Red Horse1912Oil on canvas.160 x 186 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBathing of the Red Horse (detail)1912Oil on canvas.160 x 186 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBathing of the Red Horse (detail)1912Oil on canvas.160 x 186 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBathing of the Red Horse (detail)1912Oil on canvas.160 x 186 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Dream1910Oil on canvas. 161 x 187 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Dream (detail)1910Oil on canvas. 161 x 187 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Dream (detail)1910Oil on canvas. 161 x 187 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Dream (detail)1910Oil on canvas. 161 x 187 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Mother of God of Tenderness toward Evil Hearts 1914-1915 Oil on canvas, 100.2 x 110 cmThe State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Mother of God of Tenderness toward Evil Hearts (detail)1914-1915 Oil on canvas, 100.2 x 110 cmThe State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Mother of God of Tenderness toward Evil Hearts (detail)1914-1915 Oil on canvas, 100.2 x 110 cmThe State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Mother of God of Tenderness toward Evil Hearts (detail)1914-1915 Oil on canvas, 100.2 x 110 cmThe State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaMother1915Oil on canvas. 65 x 104 cm. The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaMother (detail)1915Oil on canvas. 65 x 104 cm. The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg  

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaMother (detail)1915Oil on canvas. 65 x 104 cm. The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg  

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Death of a Commissar 1928Oil on canvas. 196 x 248 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Death of a Commissar (detail)1928Oil on canvas. 196 x 248 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Death of a Commissar (detail)1928Oil on canvas. 196 x 248 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Death of a Commissar (detail)1928Oil on canvas. 196 x 248 cm. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaViolin 1918Oil on canvas. 65 x 80 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaViolin (detail)1918Oil on canvas. 65 x 80 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaViolin (detail)1918Oil on canvas. 65 x 80 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaViolin (detail)1918Oil on canvas. 65 x 80 cm The Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma1918 in Petrograd1920Oil on canvas. 73 x 92 cm The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma1918 in Petrograd (detail)1920Oil on canvas. 73 x 92 cm The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma1918 in Petrograd (detail)1920Oil on canvas. 73 x 92 cm The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma1918 in Petrograd (detail)1920Oil on canvas. 73 x 92 cm The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBacchante 1912Oil on canvas   The State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBacchante (detail)1912Oil on canvas   The State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBacchante (detail)1912Oil on canvas   The State Russian Museum, Saint Petersburg

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma

, Featured Paintings in Detail (2)

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBacchante

Even during his college years, Petrov-Vodkin managed to enter into conflict with the Russian Orthodox Church, which discarded his work on a chapel in Samara and ultimately destroyed it as unacceptable. A number of his early works were deemed too erotic.

The main defender of the painting was Alexandre Benois; his main detractor was Ilya Repin (hence, Petrov-Vodkin was discussed by two of the major Russian painters of the time). Other major works of that time include Boys at play, and, notably, Bathing of a Red Horse and Bacchante.

During this stage in his artistic development, Petrov-Vodkin extensively used an aesthetic of Orthodox icon together with brighter colours and unusual compositions. His works were often deemed blasphemous and erotic.

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaBathing of the Red Horse

Bathing of a Red Horse caused Petrov-Vodkin to catapult into fame and the public sphere, causing much artistic discussion about his paintings.

Art connoisseurs, who were already at this time used to the striking color palettes and expressiveness of the futurists, were surprised at the artist’s different composition and the feeling of overt tension.

This painting soon became his most iconic work, and was a trademark style of the artist. It also represents his attempt to synthesize Eastern and Western art, with elements of traditional Russian icons, Italian frescoes, and neoclassical trends.

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Dream

The Dream was Petrov-Vodkin’s first famous work. Upon its exhibition, it immediately sparked a debate among other prominent Russian artists, including Alexandre Benois and Ilya Repin. Benois, and other proponents of the painting, saw it as a new expression of neo-classical art. The detractors, on the other hand, headed by Ilya Repin, saw Petrov-Vodkin as a decadent artist, unable to develop his work. It was in part this heated discussion by two of Russia’s most famous painters, over one of Petrov-Vodkin’s

works, that he was catapulted to fame so quickly when he debuted his Bathing of a Red Horse two years later.

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Mother of God of Tenderness toward Evil Hearts

Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin spent a lot of time between 1913 and 1915 working on murals in the cathedrals of Kronstadt and Sumy. This may have been what inspired the appearance of such a remarcable easel work as The Mother of God of Tenderness Towards Evil Hearts.

This was the author’s title, in Orthodox iconography the image is known as The Mother of God of Softening of Evil Hearts. Created at the start of the First World War, Petrov-Vodkin’s picture acquired a special significance as the artist’s spiritual response to the tragic events of the war. Despite the small size, a canvas is a major monumental work,

burning with the fire of a sublime spiritual force. The painter himself said that the face was “the highest possible form of expression”.

This instilling and lofty icon of the Virgin Mary is one of the most powerful images in the oeuvre of Petrov-Vodkin.

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PETROV-VODKIN, Kuzma1918 in Petrograd

In the works of Petrov-Vodkin always combined the principles of classical art and innovative search. His art is the period of the 1920s is associated with the direction of neo-classicism. Along with many artists Petrov-Vodkin took the revolution as a great event which will enable the "common people" feel like "humanity". It expressed the

mood of the artist in the film "1918 in Petrograd," Go get a second name: "Petrograd Madonna".

The master builds a composition based on a combination of different meanings. Young worker standing with a baby in her arms on the balcony, but it does not look at the street, filled with bursts in the year of famine; her figure is deployed on the viewer. The first and second opposed plans to maximize spatial resolution. The artist paints the figure of a woman thinking about the iconic image of Our Lady of the Madonna and Child in the European painting, transforming the young worker in a symbolic image of

motherhood. The combination of the specific signs of the times with a symbolic interpretation of the protagonist takes home aspect of the topic

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaViolin

In 1918-1919, the artist created a series of still lives, such as “Morning Still Life,” “Herring,” “A Glass and a Lemon,” “Violin,” “A Branch of an Apple Tree” and many more. According to Petrov-Vodkin, a still life is “a conversation between an artist and his subject” in which “the plot does not distract from the definition of the subject in the space.

What this subject is like, where it is and where I am, perceiving this subject - that is a main meaning of still life.”

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaThe Death of a Commissar

Petrov-Vodkin supported the October Revolution of 1917, as he believed in the triumph of the “simple and kind.” He understood the Revolution as an historical phenomenon that opens to people a path to perfection. It was a turning point in the history of Russia, which, according to Petrov-Vodkin, had to be perceived as a “cosmic

and universal” interpretation of reality.

This is reflected in his works "Year 1918 in Petrograd" (1920) and "Death of the Commissar" (1928), which became Soviet era art classics.

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PETROV-VODKIN, KuzmaMother

Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin was particularly interested in national roots, ideals and traditions in the mid-1910s, at the start of the First World War. Mother is based on a life motif, transformed by the master’s own personal vision. The outer appearance of the young peasant woman breast-feeding her baby grows into an image of the Madonna and

Child, full of divine grace. The monumental figurative structure of the painting is intensified by the sonorous tones and dominant reds, the favourite colour of the Russian people.

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Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin was a Russian, later Soviet, painter and writer.

Already Petrov-Vodkin’s early works are symbolic (e.g. Elegy, 1906; Bank, 1908; Dream 1910), all of them are influenced by Mikhail Vrubel, Victor Borisov-Musatov, Pierre Puvis de Chavannes and by the Belgian writer Maurice Maeterlinck.

The canvas ‘Dream’ stirred heated discussion and brought fame to the young artist; the negatively minded critics were headed by the famous Ilya Repin and their opponents were headed by Alexander Benois. The first group saw in Petrov-Vodkin the newest decadent, unable to

develop the art, the second - the expressionist of neo-classical tendencies. The painter himself could not characterize his works so definitely, he said that he was ‘a difficult painter’. His evolution proved that he did not show off. Playing Boys, 1911, Bathing of Red Horse, 1912 are a

new stage in his work, his attempt to synthesize Eastern and Western painting traditions.

In the 1910s the creative search of Petrov-Vodkin was very wide. Beside the monumental-decorative works, such as ‘Girls on Volga’, 1915, there are works devoted to the First World War, e.g. ‘On the Line of Fire’ 1916 and works devoted to motherhood, Mother 1913, Mother 1915;

Morning. Bathers 1917.

In the late 1910s he developed and wrote about a new theory concerning the depiction of space. His so-called ‘spherical perspective’ differs from the traditional ‘Italian’ perspective. The artist creates different spaces on the canvas, connected by gravity; bent axes of bodies make up a ‘fan’, which is opening from within the picture. Paintings with such compositional structure should be viewed by a moving spectator from different points, e.g. Midday. Summer 1917; Sleeping Child. 1924; First Steps 1925; Death of Commissar 1928; Spring 1935 and others. Such treatment of space and very specific coloring (based on primary colors – red, yellow and blue) determine the mature style of Petrov-Vodkin.

After the Bolshevik Revolution (November 1917) Petrov-Vodkin painted still-lifes more and more often: Morning Still-Life. 1918; Still-Life with Mirror. 1919; Still-Life with Blue Ashtray 1920, though the new themes are also present in his art, e.g. The Year 1918 in Petrograd (1920), and

Workers (1926).

In the late 1920s-early 1930s he had to abandon painting for a time because of illness; he returned to writing. He wrote two autobiographical novels ‘Khvalynsk’ and ‘Euclid’s Space’, in which he expressed his views and theories on nature and possibilities of fine arts. The latest of Petrov-Vodkin’s works 1919. Alarm, 1934, though it was about the actual situation of 1919, became the political symbol of the whole epoch

and the viewers of the 1930s referred it to their own time.

The work of Petrov-Vodkin did not correspond to the Soviet ideology of the Stalin's period and after his death in 1939 the painter was quickly ‘forgotten’, happily not for long.

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Александр Бородин Князь Игорь. Половецкие пляски. Наталья Морозова - Улетай на крыльях ветра

Улетай на крыльях ветраТы в край родной, родная песня наша,Туда, где мы тебя свободно пели,Где было так привольно нам с тобою.

Улетай на крыльях ветраТы в край родной, родная песня наша,Туда, где мы тебя свободно пели,Где было так привольно нам с тобою.

Там, под знойным небом,Негой воздух полон,Там под говор моряДремлют горы в облаках;

Там так ярко солнце светит,Родные горы светом заливая,В долинах пышно розы расцветаютИ соловьи поют в лесах зеленых

Там, под знойным небом,Негой воздух полон,Там под говор моряДремлют горы в облаках;

Улетай на крыльях ветраТы в край родной, родная песня наша,Туда, где мы тебя свободно пели,Где было так привольно нам с тобою.

Улетай на крыльях ветраТы в край родной, родная песня наша,Туда, где мы тебя свободно пели,Где было так привольно нам с тобою.

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Alexander Borodin, Prince Igor, Polovtsian Dances. Natalia Morozova - Fly Away On The Wings Of The Wind

Fly away on wings of windTo native lands, our native song,To there, where we sang you freely,Where we were so carefree with you.

Fly away on wings of windTo native lands, our native song,To there, where we sang you freely,Where we were so carefree with you.

There, under the hot sky,With bliss the air is full,There, to the murmur of the sea, Mountains doze in the clouds.

There, the sun shines so brightly,Bathing our native mountains in light.In the meadows, roses bloom luxuriously,And nightingales sing in the green forests.

There, under the hot sky,With bliss the air is full,There, to the murmur of the sea, Mountains doze in the clouds.

Fly away on wings of windTo native lands, our native song,To there, where we sang you freely,Where we were so carefree with you.

There, under the hot sky,With bliss the air is full,There, to the murmur of the sea, Mountains doze in the clouds.

Fly away on wings of windTo native lands, our native song,To there, where we sang you freely,Where we were so carefree with you.

There, the sun shines so brightly,Bathing our native mountains in light.In the meadows, roses bloom luxuriously,And nightingales sing in the green forests.