Biography from LewAllen Galleries at the Santa Fe Railyard:
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compared to the extensive information about American artists.
Famous for his ability to capture and convey the ineffable charm of the
Russian landscape, Isaak Levitan was born in 1860 in Vibarty,
Lithuania. Orphaned by the age of eighteen, Levitan became close
friends with Anton Chekhov, spending many nights with the Russian
author and his family. Chekhov would later satirize his friend in
his play The Seagull as the dilettante artist Ryabovsky.
Levitan attended the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture, and
Architecture from 1873-1885. While there, he studied under many
famous names including Vasily Perov (1832-82), Alexei Savrasov
(1830-97), and Vasily Perov (1844-1927). The meeting of Alexei
Savrasov proved to be prophetic for Levitan. The Russian
landscape master fired up the impressionable artist’s imagination,
encouraging him to work outside and study nature at first hand.
Savrasov also passed on to Levitan his admiration for the artists of
the Barbizon School.
As an artist, Levitan sought to suggest a
spiritual dimension in the natural scene, to reveal its character and
portray its moods, often betraying an indisputable yet captivating vein
of melancholy in the Russian landscape. While a large number of
his paintings reference man’s presence and toil on the land, nature is
always the subject of Levitan’s compositions. At times it appears
ready to intimidate or overwhelm humankind; at others, it is peaceful
and benevolent.
Following a trip down the Volga River in 1887, Levitan began painting
what are known as his “mood landscapes,” successors to the lyrical
landscape, which represented a turning back to nature in the Russian
psyche. His mature style is characterized by simple compositions,
a delicate, subtle tonality, and careful selection of motifs, as well
as, confident and economic brushstrokes.
A member of The
Association for Traveling Exhibitions, also known as the Wanderers,
Levitan showed regularly in exhibitions from 1884 before being elected
a full member in 1891. Six years later, he would also be elected
to the Munich Secession, showing with the group in 1896, 1898, and
1899.
In 1898, he accepted a position as head of the landscape department at
the Moscow School of Painting, a position formally held by his mentor
Alexei Savrasov. His work, which was the subject of a major
retrospective in Moscow in 1938, can be found in many international
institutions including the State Russian Museum, the Ashmolean Museum
at the University of Oxford, the National Gallery of Armenia, and the
Tretyakov Gallery.
Beloved by the Russian people, his body was re-interred in 1941 in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow alongside Anton Chekhov. |
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