Portraits and people: Constantine the Great. What is the uniqueness of the Moscow anniversary exhibition

03.03.2020

Konstantin Makovsky is a famous Russian artist who painted many paintings of boyar Rus' of the 17th century. The furnishings of the boyar choirs, the clothes of the heroes of the paintings, and the boyars and hawthorns themselves are reproduced so reliably that individual chapters of the history of Rus' can be studied from the artist’s paintings.

The accuracy in writing individual details and motifs of patterns woven by the hands of Russian embroiderers, or clear ornaments on carved goblets and bowls, surprises and delights viewers of the past and present.

Luxurious clothes embroidered with pearls, amazingly beautiful headdresses of that time, beautiful hawthorns adorned with precious necklaces, boyars in brocade caftans - everything is felt with what love for Russian national beauty and culture, for the rich heritage of our ancestors, these pictures were painted . You can stand near each of them for a long time - admire the Russian patterns and feel pride in yourself and at the same time sadness, sadness that much has been lost, has not been preserved and is not preserved today. Therefore, such paintings, in which unique evidence of the culture of the Russian land remained, are especially valuable for us.

Biography of the artist Konstantin Makovsky


Konstantin Yegorovich Makovsky (1839 - 1915) was born into a family where there was an atmosphere of art worship. Many famous figures of culture and art visited their house. The artist's father, Yegor Ivanovich Makovsky, was one of the largest collectors in Moscow in the second quarter of the 19th century. His hobbies were works of fine art, mostly old engravings.

And Konstantin Yegorovich, having inherited his father's passion, collected all the masterpieces of Russian ancient craftsmanship, but it was "beautiful antiquity." He skillfully added something to living rooms and workshops, and then used it in his paintings, and something he simply put in his old large ebony closet, so that later he could admire and admire the beauty and skill of Russian masters.

On the cornice of the fireplace stood old household utensils: silver ladles, cups, washstands, fans - items of boyar times. Old boyar, multi-colored sundresses, handrails studded with pearls, kokoshniks embroidered with pearl lace - all this can be seen in the artist's paintings. And besides the things lovingly collected by Konstantin Yegorovich, people who gathered around him also took part in his paintings. Sometimes they acted out scenes from boyar life, which were then transferred to the canvas. And this undoubtedly aroused the keen interest of the audience, because through the paintings of Makovsky they were attached to the knowledge of the history of Rus' and the culture of their ancestors.

The artist's daughter in her memoirs told how "... luxurious" living pictures "from the boyars' life were staged ...". There were sometimes up to 150 people invited to these evenings, among whom were representatives of ancient families, descendants of those depicted by the artist. They "... deftly and beautifully dressed in brocade and ..." in order to reproduce in them the scene conceived by the artist. This is how the paintings appeared - "The Wedding Feast", "The Choice of the Bride" and many other paintings.

Paintings by Konstantin Makovsky


On the canvases of K.E. Makovsky in bright luxurious costumes from his own collection created images of beautiful women, the artist's contemporaries. You look at the picture and feel as if the Russian pattern shines, the sarafan of the Russian beauty embroidered with silk and silver gleams. And if you pay attention, you will see that in each picture the hawthorn girls wear completely different headdresses. Indeed, the artist's collection of kokoshniks and headdresses was the richest and most valuable acquisition.

Collecting objects of Russian antiquity K.E. Makovsky continued to study all his life. Collecting masterpieces of Russian masters, the artist became familiar with the history of Russia and, admiring them, was inspired by new ideas. Now his canvases evoke in us not only admiration for the richest heritage of our ancestors, but also a desire to learn more and more about our homeland.

About how K.E. Makovsky used his collection in his work, the writer E.I. Fortunato, who was lucky enough to be his model.

KE Makovsky was not only an artist. Communicating with prominent historians, he himself became a great specialist in the field of Russian antiquity. K.E. Makovsky sought to preserve the artistic heritage of Russia. Therefore, it is no coincidence that in 1915 he became a member of the Society for the Revival of Artistic Rus', whose main task was to preserve, study and promote Russian antiquity.

It is bitter and sad that the collection, which has been collected for half a century, which has occupied such an important place in the life of the artist, which has become a reflection of an entire era in Russian culture, will be put up for auction just six months after his death. In September 1915, K.E. Makovsky was hit by a street cab on one of the streets of Petrograd. Having received a severe head injury, the artist died two days later. Sudden death ruined all plans...

More than 1,000 items were listed at the auction, some of them went to the capital's museums: the Russian Museum, the Hermitage, the Museum of the School of Technical Drawing of Baron Stieglitz, and Moscow museums. Many items were bought up by representatives of Moscow antique firms. Authentic costumes, silver goblets, ladles, glasses passed into the hands of prominent Moscow collectors.

But not everyone admired the paintings of K. Makovsky and his manner of working.

At the beginning of his creative career, K. Makovsky shared the views of the Wanderers, he painted peasant children (“Children running from a thunderstorm”, “Date”), but already in the 1880s the artist irrevocably moved away from them and began to arrange personal exhibitions.

In 1883 he painted The Boyar Wedding Feast in the 17th Century, followed by The Choice of a Bride by Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich (1886), The Death of Ivan the Terrible (1888), Dressing the Bride to the Crown (1890), Kissing rite" (1895,). The paintings were successful both in Russia and at international exhibitions. For some of them, at the World Exhibition of 1889 in Paris, K. Makovsky was awarded a gold medal.

The prices for his paintings were always high. P.M. Tretyakov sometimes could not get them. But foreign collectors willingly bought canvases of the "boyar" cycle, so most of the artist's works left Russia.

Thanks to this success, K.E. Makovsky became one of the richest people. Throughout his life, he was surrounded by luxury, which no Russian artist dreamed of. Makovsky fulfilled any order on any topic with the same brilliance. It was the latter that caused many misunderstanding, and even condemnation. Some, apparently, envied the success, others believed that the people with their daily lives should be present in the paintings. But such paintings were sold out not so willingly, and many believed that Makovsky wrote on those topics that were in demand, that is, for the sake of his own enrichment.

However, he always lived as he wanted and wrote what he wanted. His vision of beauty simply coincided with the requirements and demands of those people who were willing to pay a lot of money for his paintings. His easy success was the main reason for the negative attitude towards him and his work of the Wanderers. He was accused of using art and his talent for material gain.

K.E. Makovsky began his artistic journey together with the Wanderers, exhibiting paintings on the theme of the life of the people. However, over time, his interests changed, and from the 1880s he became a successful salon portrait painter. The fact that this happened for the sake of material wealth cannot be believed. After all, this is evidenced by his numerous collections and multifaceted talent. But it cannot be denied that Makovsky did not seek recognition abroad. In addition, Europeans were interested in Russian history, so his work was quickly sold.

In his personal life, Makovsky was also happy. His pleasant appearance, sociability, always open and smiling look of clear eyes made Konstantin Yegorovich always a welcome guest. He was married three times. His first wife, Lenochka Burkova, an actress at the Alexandrinsky Theatre, lived with him for a short life. A charming and gentle girl brought a lot of joy and warmth into his life. But illness carried her away from earthly life early.

Carefree and greedy for the joys of life, Konstantin Yegorovich quickly consoled himself when he saw a girl of extraordinary beauty at the ball - Yulenka Letkova. The girl was only sixteen years old, and the charming painter was thirty-six. The wedding took place soon after. Having lived twenty years of a happy family life, Konstantin Yegorovich painted many paintings, most of which contain a cute image of his young wife. For many years, Yulia Pavlovna Makovskaya was his muse and model for portraits.

In 1889, Konstantin Makovsky went to the World Exhibition in Paris, where he exhibited several of his paintings. There he became interested in the young Maria Alekseevna Matavtina (1869-1919). In 1891, an illegitimate son Konstantin was born. I had to confess everything to my wife. Yulia Pavlovna did not forgive betrayal. A few years later, a divorce was filed. And Konstantin Yegorovich continued a happy family life with his third wife, whom he also used as a model. He also often depicted his children from both his second and third marriages on his canvases.












The Project tracked down Konstantin Kilimnik, a mysterious Russian in the case of Russian interference in the American elections, in the Moscow region. It turned out that Kilimnik worked with Paul Manafort not only in Ukraine, but also in Kyrgyzstan. Both there and there they defended the foreign policy interests of Russia, and part of this work could be paid in the company of billionaire Oleg Deripaska.

“What if I really were a spy? I wouldn't be here. I would be in Russia,” said Konstantin Kilimnik, at that moment a 46-year-old Russian political strategist, who had just found himself in the very center of the scandal over Moscow’s alleged interference in the US presidential election, while sitting in a Kiev cafe in February 2017.

A year and a half later, in August 2018, the Project found Kilimnik in Russia, in an elite gated community in the north-west of the Moscow region, just outside the Moscow Ring Road. Homes there are worth about $2 million.

House of Konstantin Kilimnik in the Moscow region

He lives there with his wife and still avoids publicity. The former owner of the house told the Project that he had never seen Kilimnik and that he negotiated the sale with his wife. × When the correspondent of "Proekt" called him for the first time, Kilimnik, without delay, said that it was not him. True, he called back to a call from another number himself and did not deny it. When asked to talk about his work with Paul Manafort, Kilimnik replied, "I'm not interested in discussing it."

Could Kilimnik's move to Russia, as he himself once said, mean that he is a Russian spy? The Project found unique facts about the career of the main Russian in the Mueller investigation and realized that Kilimnik was much more connected to Russian state interests than it seemed.

Spy

“It was only after he was fired that everyone realized that he had obvious spy skills. He did not make it to any group photo, despite the fact that, as acting director, he opened many events - he delivered a very short opening speech and left the presidium. He didn’t even make it to informal photos of parties,” says Kilimnik’s former colleague, who worked closely with him at the International Republican Institute (IRI, an American NGO that declares its goal to “develop democracy” in the world. Now IRI in Russia is on the list of undesirable organizations , his site is blocked).

There are two rare photographs in the Paul Manafort evidence base. This was an official photo shoot, including Kilimnik's meetings with Viktor Yanukovych, the ex-president of Ukraine. However, in both official photos, Kilimnik turns his back to the camera. He was identified by two interlocutors of the Project. × The publication of these photos in the case angered Manafort - through his lawyers, he demanded that they be removed from the case).

Today, the Project publishes for the first time a large photograph of the Russian defendant in the Manafort case.

He quietly went about his work and did not strive for publicity, he listened more than he spoke. . . Two of Kilimnik's acquaintances describe him almost identically. × The miniature growth of Kilimnik, for which he was even given the nickname Dwarf in Russia (the Americans called him "Hand Luggage"), also did not make him a memorable character.

Now Kilimnik is possibly the main lead in the Mueller investigation. The charges against Manafort, which are being considered in court these days, so far relate only to financial crimes, despite the fact that the investigation of the special counsel was initiated by alleged Russian interference in the American elections. Kilimnik's testimony, or new facts about him, could be a breakthrough in this case.

So far, Mueller's team has not provided evidence of Kilimnik's connection with the Russian authorities, although it stated at the end of last year that he "keeps in touch with the Russian intelligence service."

The only proven fact of this kind is Kilimnik's studies at the Military University of the Ministry of Defense, where they train, among other things, translators for military intelligence. There, Kilimnik had the nickname "Cat", another graduate of this university told the "Project", but later refused any conversations, citing "a conversation with the management."

Kilimnik joined MRI in 1995. “Basically, it was a briefing on the conduct of election campaigns,” former colleague Marina Malysheva describes his duties. He was quickly promoted, eventually rising to the position of acting director of the Russian branch. It happened at the turn of 2004 and 2005, when the previous director of the IRI, Sam Patten, left Russia. He left the post hastily and in frustration - he was crushed by the catastrophically low result in the elections of the SPS party, which was headed by his friend Boris Nemtsov. Due to the haste, a new director was not found, and Kilimnik was made acting. It was during these few months that events took place that say a lot about our hero.

Ukrainian connection

Kilimnik, according to him, was born in Krivoy Rog, Dnepropetrovsk region. Until very recently, his parents and brother remained in Ukraine, whom Konstantin helped with money because of his addiction to alcohol. . , says the interlocutor of the “Project”, who is well acquainted with Kilimnik ×

In 2004-2005, the IRI found itself deeply immersed in the tumultuous Ukrainian events that came to be known as the Orange Revolution.

IRI in Ukraine worked with representatives of the "democratic coalition", that is, with the leaders of the "orange" Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko . , says a senior IRI official. ×

The Moscow office was not on the sidelines. Kilimnik often traveled to Kyiv and sent hired political technologists there . , says a former MRI employee. × However, in the spring of 2005, it turned out that in Ukraine Kilimnik did not work for his employer at all.

“In March or April 2005, it turned out that Kilimnik was providing services to Viktor Yanukovych (then the leader of the pro-Russian Party of Regions - Project) and he was ordered to quit immediately, his last working day was April 30,” Kilimnik’s former colleague recalls. "Kilimnik was fired in April 2005 after I became aware of extremely credible information about his violation of our code of ethics," confirms Steve Nix, director of IRI programs in Eurasia.

Konstantin Kilimnik shakes hands with Viktor Yanukovych; with his back against Yanukovych - Nikolai Zlochevsky, at that time the Minister of Natural Resources; second right - Anna German, then deputy head of the presidential administration. Photo from the Paul Manafort evidence base.

After the inglorious dismissal of Kilimnik, much became clear. He wrote all instructions to the staff on separate stickers. . , says his former colleague. × He often gave assignments to employees, which he asked not to tell anyone else at the institute. At first, everyone thought that this was for security reasons: “But it turned out that we all worked on the instructions of Kilimnik not for one, but for two organizations” . , says Kilimnik's former subordinate. ×

Kilimnik left, leaving nothing behind in his office. The work computer he handed in was absolutely clean. Kilimnik led the organization's accounting, and this became a big problem: even the Quick Books program, an analogue of 1C for American accounting, was demolished. Lina Markova, financial director of MRI and the then wife of political scientist Sergei Markov, worked only with 1C, MRI tried to find Kilimnik, but he ignored former employees . , says his former subordinate. ×

“Yes, he was hiding from them,” Kilimnik's friend confirms. “But because he thought he was insulted there.”

Several acquaintances of Kilimnik and Ukrainian politicians confirm that he started working in Ukraine back in 2004. One of the political strategists sent by Kilimnik to a neighboring country said that he was invited to “hold elections in the Donbass” (the presidential elections of 2004, when Yanukovych’s dubious victory in the second round led to the “orange revolution”, and as a result the country was headed by Viktor Yushchenko) .

Perhaps Kilimnik ended up in Ukraine even before Manafort . , according to one of the interlocutors of the "Project". × In 2004, when Kilimnik had already started working in Ukraine, Manafort did not actively participate in the elections, recalls Vasily Stoyakin, who was then an adviser to the head of the Ukrainian presidential administration and led the regional analytics group at the Yanukovych campaign headquarters.

Be that as it may, in the spring of 2005, Kilimnik and Manafort were already openly working together in Ukraine. “They looked funny together with Paul - Tarapunka and Shtepsel,” the former member of the Yanukovych team laughs, recalling the images of Soviet pop heroes, who were strikingly different in height and complexion.

Election poster of Viktor Yanukovych with a slogan created by Paul Manafort's team

As a result, Kilimnik and Manafort settled in Ukraine for a long time: under their supervision, Yanukovych was rehabilitated, the Party of Regions won the parliamentary elections, its chairman became prime minister, and then president. Even after the victory of the Euromaidan, Manafort did not stop working with the Yanukovych team.

However, the American political strategist was not Kilimnik's only partner in his work in Ukraine.

aluminum tie

Kilimnik's administrative work for Yanukovych in 2004–2005 could have been built through Basic Element, the Russian company of billionaire Oleg Deripaska . , said a Project source who worked at MRI at the time. × In April 2018, Deripaska came under personal US sanctions as an oligarch close to Vladimir Putin.

During the period of late 2004 and early 2005, Kilimnik sent MRI employees to the Bazel office on Rochdelskaya Street in Moscow at least 20 times, says one of the people who directly carried out such instructions from Kilimnik. There, Kilimnik's messengers were given envelopes with cash, air tickets for him and the political consultants he attracted. Kilimnik did not explain to the employees why the money for the Ukrainian assignments is obtained at Basel.

The IRI manager says that the institute never sent Kilimnik or his political consultants on business trips to other CIS countries, all work there was done through local offices.

Deripaska's representative told the Project that neither he nor Bazel ever funded Kilimnik, and "the private investment relationship between Deripaska and Manafort, the existence of which is not disputed, was never aimed at achieving political goals."

Oleg Deripaska

Deripaska's connections with Manafort were indeed no secret. According to political consultant Philip Griffin, at the end of 2004, Manafort's partner, Rick Davis, sent him to Ukraine "to help Deripaska."

Cooperation between Manafort and Deripaska could continue at least until 2016. In the summer of 2016, according to the Washington Post, Manafort and Kilimnik repeatedly discussed the possibility of meeting, allegedly with Deripaska, in their correspondence; On August 3, 2016, Deripaska's plane landed at Newark Airport, according to the ADS-B Exchange website. . . This was first noticed by freelance journalist Scott Steadman. Deripaska's representative, when asked by The Project about whether that meeting really took place, replied that "the relationship between Manafort and Deripaska was terminated many years ago." × Three days later, as is known from Anti-Corruption Foundation investigations, Deripaska had a meeting with the then Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Prikhodko - on a yacht off the Scandinavian coast and in the company of escort girls. Prikhodko then oversaw international relations in the government. According to the memoirs of the escort girl Nastya Rybka, Prikhodko and Deripaska discussed Russian-American relations on the yacht.

As The Project found out, Kilimnik and Manafort worked not only in Ukraine, but also in Central Asia. And Kilimnik again received money for this at Rochdelskaya, 30, according to the interlocutor of the "Project".

Kyrgyz messenger

The work of Manafort in Kyrgyzstan, since at least 2005, has not been previously reported. That year, mass protests began in the former Soviet republic - they were attended by supporters of the oppositionists who lost the parliamentary elections. The "Tulip Revolution" led to a change of power. The pro-Russian president Askar Akaev fled the country, and his place was soon taken by the no less pro-Russian oppositionist Kurmanbek Bakiyev.

"Tulip revolution" in Kyrgyzstan, 2005.


Triple portrait of Konstantin Korovin

What is the uniqueness of the Moscow anniversary exhibition?


The upcoming exposition in the State will be the first exhibition in the last 50 years Konstantin Korovin, where the audience will be able to fully get acquainted with the work of the painter. This is the second exhibition of the project, which began in 2011 in St. Petersburg. Lidia Iovleva, Deputy General Director of the State Tretyakov Gallery, spoke about Konstantin Korovin and the upcoming event.

– In 2011, an exhibition of Konstantin Korovin was held at the Russian Museum. How will the exposition in the Tretyakov Gallery differ?

– Both of these exhibitions were created within the framework of one large project of our museums. In both versions, the exposition should consist of three sections, revealing three hypostases. First of all - easel art: portraits, still lifes, landscapes, including the famous views of Paris and the Crimea. Here we coincide: we take the best works from our collection and the collection of the Russian Museum and supplement them with our own “discoveries” – paintings from private and museum collections. The second section is theater. Like any impressionist, Korovin had a craving for decorativeism. This property of his talent was discovered by Mamontov. And, finally, monumental painting.

- Surprisingly, Korovin at the time of his collaboration with the Mamontov Private Opera was a little over twenty years old!

– Quite right! Korovin had not yet graduated from the Moscow School of Painting and Sculpture. Mamontov invited many, including Levitan, but only Korovin became a major theater artist among those invited in the early 1880s.

- And has Korovin's first theatrical work, on which he worked together with Levitan, been preserved?

No, just a few sketches. Little remains of mammoth productions. But the unique creation of Korovin, the scenery, has been preserved. Real, real scenery, costumes, hats and shoes for Rimsky-Korsakov's opera The Golden Cockerel. The performance was staged in 1934 in the theater of the French city of Vichy and Korovin was invited to design it. After the closing of the theater, almost all the stage props were retained by the once famous lyric tenor Raisov in Russia and Europe. Then, already from his daughter, it was acquired by the grandson of the famous Russian artist V.D., who lived in France, through an auction. Polenov - Alexander Alexandrovich Lyapin, a wonderful person, a great friend of Russia and Russian museums. With the kind consent, we will present the scenery for two scenes of the opera. This was not at the exhibition in the Russian Museum.

– What is the fate of the northern panels, where did they end up after Nizhny Novgorod, and how did they end up with you?

- It is known that on the initiative of the same Savva Mamontov, Konstantin Korovin was involved in the design of the Far North pavilion at the All-Russian Art and Industrial Exhibition of 1896 in Nizhny Novgorod. To collect material, Konstantin Korovin and Valentin Serov were sent, as we would now say, on a business trip to the northern provinces of Russia. They visited Finland (then part of the Russian Empire) and Sweden. From the trip, Korovin brought back many sketches and paintings, to a large extent revealing to Russian art the peculiar beauty and poetry of the nature of the Russian North. Based on this material, the artist created ten large panels for the pavilion named above. After the closing of the exhibition, they were placed by Mamontov in the building of the Yaroslavsky railway station in Moscow, redesigned according to the project of F. Shekhtel.

“we take the best works from our collection and the collection of the Russian Museum and supplement them with our “discoveries” – paintings from private and museum collections”

After another restructuring of the building, already in the post-war years, the work was transferred to the Tretyakov Gallery. This happened in 1961. The exhibition will feature four of them, which were "put in order" by the wonderful restorers of the Tretyakov Gallery. Due to the difficulty of transportation, they were not exhibited in the Russian Museum. But in St. Petersburg they were shown almost in full, used by Korovin for the World Art and Industrial Exhibition of 1900 in Paris. With us, for the same reasons, unfortunately, they will not be shown.

– What will be your edition of the catalog and why did you have to make your own, if there is only one project of exhibitions?

- In the Russian Museum, there was, rather, an album dedicated to the work of Korovin, including mostly easel works. In addition, our and their panels. With us, this is not so much an album as a catalog, but of an album character. There will be everything that is exhibited at the exhibition.

- Is it possible to say that Korovin's impressionism is of a special nature? After all, the artist came to him himself and only later reinforced with knowledge about French artists who worked in this manner?

– Basically, yes. But there was a general movement of both Russian and European art towards this style, this method. It came from the rejection of ossified academicism and began in the middle of the 19th century from a general enthusiasm for plein airism. In France, the first plein airists were the Barbizons. With us, this, first of all, manifested itself in the Moscow School of Painting and Sculpture. Korovin came to this himself, developing the traditions of his teachers Savrasov and Polenov. Through plein airism, he understood the impressionistic method, where light and color are the main thing, and in their interaction they change the world. And then I got acquainted with this direction in France. Korovin had an organic, innate attraction to an impressionistic-joyful perception of life. He existed in the world, each manifestation of which evoked a lively response in his soul. Impression - this is impressionism. Not a generalization, an analysis. After all, how artists worked before - they observed, analyzed, wrote sketches and then - a great job. Everyone wanted, like Ivanov, to write one picture for life. And Korovin even has portraits, for example, of Mamontov or Chichagov - this is an “impression” of a person, and not an analysis of his psychology.

- In Korovin's painting there is a feeling that he was loved by everyone around and all his life. Yes, and the memories of him confirm this!

- Yes, but he did not have a very successful personal life. First, an accidental marriage. According to the standards of the XIX century, if a child is born, fidelity can not be kept, but it is necessary to observe decency, take care of your son and wife. We recently bought Korovin's letters and notebooks. Some of them have been published, some will be published in the catalog. There are complaints about a deep misunderstanding in the family, with his wife.

- Finally! His wife does not even flash anywhere in his memories!

That's why it doesn't flicker. He was young. She was a chorus girl in Kharkov. I’ll make a reservation right away, Korovin didn’t portray her in the famous Chorus Girl.

Is she with flashlights?

– Yes, absolutely right! By the way, these "Lanterns" will be with us everywhere - both on the poster and in the catalog.

- At some point, Korovin decided to try himself as a designer of decorative and applied arts. I managed to work in Abramtsevo, created furniture for a tea room. At the exhibition in the Russian Museum, this side of his work was bypassed, but what will you have?

We don't put much emphasis on either. This is not the main thing in the work of Korovin.

- But he received a medal for a tea room at an industrial exhibition!

“There is another remarkable work by Korovin - a frieze from the early 1900s. It's called "Old Monastery"

- Received! But there will be no special section. Maybe we will put something in the window, but more like theatrical works - costumes.

- It seems that everything is known about Korovin, and at the same time, it is full of mysteries. Here, for example, is the problem of the works of the 1930s, when he signed paintings for his son ...

The life of most emigrants was quite difficult. Korovin was no exception. He was an artist representing Russia and, moreover, its already bygone era. If in the 1920s, despite the predominance of avant-garde trends, the old wave still managed to exist, then in the 1930s a complete drama began. His son, Alexei Korovin, was seriously ill from childhood, the artist's wife was also ill, and then a grandson was born. Konstantin Alekseevich remained the only breadwinner of the family. Alexei Korovin studied painting, but did not grow up to be a great artist. His father was very sorry for him, tried to help in every possible way and often signed his works with his own name. And sometimes the opposite happened. Therefore, when a late work comes to us, the question always arises: who wrote and who signed. This situation gives rise to the possibility of fakes. We treat this material very carefully and carefully. But besides the later paintings, there is another danger. Due to his popularity, Korovin is in great demand. He was often asked to repeat works. And here is the second trick for experts. But if you compare it in detail with the originals, you will always guess that this is a repetition.

– In addition to easel painting and panels, visitors will be able to see theatrical scenery by Konstantin Korovin. And here is another question related to attribution. Either Korovin wrote them himself, or they were made by someone else according to his sketches. What is your opinion on this matter?

– Here the Bakhrushinsky Museum is the leader. They must conduct an examination. But we are inclined to believe that in the scenery on display it is Korovin himself, perhaps with the participation of assistants. There are no documents. Just at that time, Korovin wrote his memoirs, but did not say a word about this work.

– In preparation for the exhibition, you have re-dated some of the famous paintings by Konstantin Korovin. Why did this happen?

- Yes, in particular, we are talking about "Chorus Girl" and "Northern Idyll". Traditionally, they dated us in 1883 and 1886. The Korovin specialist at the Russian Museum expressed doubts about this. "Chorus Girl" is signed as follows: "Kharkov, Commercial Garden, 1883". Kruglov noted that Korovin first visited Kharkov only in 1887 with the Mamontov Theater. We agreed with him and began to study the work in detail. They carried out technological research, began to compare the radiographs of his works of 1883, 1887 and the radiographs of the Chorus Girl. It turned out that she did not go to bed by 1883.

– And how does it happen, do you compare smears?

- Strokes, white overlay system, shadow, light, saturation have changed. When the painting is impasto (namely, this is the innovation of the Chorus Girl), the distribution of light and shadow is different. In each time period, a person changes. His handwriting is changing. In 1883, he still gravitated toward Savrasov's, Polenov's methods of work.

Where did this date, 1883, come from?

“I am fascinated by this delicate and elegant work and believe that it will be another opening of the exhibition”

- The first exhibition of Korovin in the Tretyakov Gallery was held in 1922. Until the 1920s, we did not have scientific employees. There was a director Grabar, there was a curator and there was one restorer. There were not even these labels in the pictures. A penny catalog was for sale, an inventory. According to the numbering of the paintings on the walls, it was possible to understand whether it was Surikov or Repin. But after the civil war, a mass of illiterate people came, and explanations were needed. First came the tour department. Prior to this, excursions were led by teachers of gymnasiums. There is a legend that Krupskaya also led the workers. So, when they began to prepare the Korovin exhibition of the twenty-second year, he was asked to sign, among other things, this work. And he wrote in ink with a pen on the back, and then on the front side as well: “1883. Commercial garden, Kharkiv. He always confused the dates, and one cannot trust the accuracy here.

- And what about the "Northern Idyll"? Here, he could not forget in what year, what young lady did he write?

– This work came to us under Tretyakov. It was presented by Princess Orlova. But not the one that Serov wrote.

- Probably the one that Korovin wrote?

– Yes, absolutely right! It has not been dated by the artist himself. Somehow it happened historically that it was determined in 1886, because. was a similar landscape study. Again, Kruglov expressed doubts about the date, and we began to study. Firstly, for the first time it was presented at an exhibition in 1892. A letter from 1891 was found in which Nesterov and Polenov wrote: "Korovin is busy with his Berendeys." It is clear that this was the picture. After Ostrovsky and Vasnetsov, all such things stylized as antiquity were called "Berendeiki". After a detailed analysis, it became clear that it could not have been written before 1892. And since it was presented at the exhibition of 1892, we dated it that way. And all this was again confirmed by a comparative analysis of radiographs.

“Korovin had an organic, innate attraction to an impressionistic-joyful perception of life. He existed in the world, each manifestation of which evoked a lively response in his soul.

– Did you have to carry out restoration work for this exhibition?

– Thank God, easel works did not require special restoration. Our things are strong, there are good restorers in the Tretyakov Gallery, they monitor the collection. We restored the panels that came to us from the Yaroslavl railway station in a very dusty, sooty condition. Of the 10, half have been restored. Fortunately, there were no big losses, but there were scraps. We expect that in the future we will continue this work, and the results will be shown to the public.

- Will there be any other surprises?

There is another remarkable work by Korovin - a frieze from the early 1900s. It is called "Old Monastery". I saw him only during the preparation for the exhibition. It is made in the style of the "World of Art". This frieze is on canvas with a brush, oil and tempera. The line prevails there. When we opened it, we were delighted. It seemed to be monochrome, but the brownish tone of the canvas, the brownish images of the monastery and the green tempera in the image of the clumps of trees. I am fascinated by this delicate and elegant work and believe that it will be another opening of the exhibition.


Konstantin Egorovich Makovsky was one of the most fashionable and expensive portrait painters in Russia in the second half of the 19th century. Contemporaries called him "brilliant Kostya", and Emperor Alexander II called him "my painter". The number of paintings sold by the virtuoso master could only be compared with the popularity of paintings by Aivazovsky, the most prolific artist. Moreover, for all that, they cost such colossal money that Russian collectors, including Pavel Tretyakov, did not have the opportunity to purchase them. And Makovsky's worldwide fame was so great that it was he who was asked by the Americans to paint the first presidential portrait of Theodore Roosevelt.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0031.jpg" alt=" "Portrait of E.I. Makovsky, the artist's father." (1856). Author: K.E. Makovsky ." title=""Portrait of E.I. Makovsky, the artist's father." (1856).

“For what came out of me, I consider myself indebted neither to the academy nor to the professors, but exclusively to my father”, - recalled K. E. Makovsky, who inherited all the talents from his parents. The mother had a magnificent talent as a singer, which she sacrificed for the sake of the family. And the fact that all the children in the Makovsky family were musically gifted is her merit.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0025.jpg" alt="Vladimir Makovsky.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0034.jpg" alt="Nikolai Makovsky, son.

As a 4-year-old child, Kostya drew easily and naturally everything he saw. And at the age of 12 he was already studying at the School of Painting and Sculpture, where the first teachers were Zaryanko, Scotty and Tropinin. The young talent mastered the painting style in such a way that his copies could not be distinguished from Tropinin's portraits.

Kostya Makovsky was among those 14 best graduates of the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts who organized the so-called"бунт четырнадцати ". Все "бунтари" своих дипломов так и не получили и Маковский, в том числе. Однако через несколько лет он был удостоен звания академика, профессора, действительного члена академии.!}

The richest and noblest vying with each other posed for the painter, as it was very prestigious to have a portrait of a genius. He was selflessly loved by women, and he loved them.

Personal life in the portraits of Konstantin Makovsky

The loving Makovsky had ten children from four women, two of whom died in infancy. The fruit of the first love was Konstantin's illegitimate daughter Natalia, born in 1860 and living in her father's house until her marriage.
In 1866, the artist married Elena Burkova, actress of the drama troupe of the Imperial Theaters in St. Petersburg. A young couple with common interests and spiritual kinship lived happily ever after. Elena drew a little and was passionate about music and theater. She brought a lot of love and warmth to the scattered "bohemian" life of Makovsky. But their happiness ended abruptly: first, a newborn son dies, and two years later, Elena dies of tuberculosis.


In less than a year, the widowed Makovsky meets at a ball in the Naval Corps 15-year-old Yulia Pavlovna Letkova, who came to St. Petersburg to enter the conservatory. Having fallen in love at first sight, the 35-year-old art professor did not leave the young beauty a single step. He was captivated by the extraordinary musicality of the young lady, who had an unusually beautiful soprano timbre. And Konstantin Yegorovich himself had a surprisingly velvety baritone, and sang like a professional artist.

When Julia was sixteen, they got married and left for Paris. Their first daughter Marina was also born there, who will die at the age of 8 months from meningitis.



Somehow, in several sessions, Konstantin will paint the first portrait of his wife Julia in a red beret, which will open a huge series of famous female portraits. And for about fifteen years, Yulia Pavlovna will be the constant muse and model of Makovsky's historical and mythological paintings.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0008.jpg" alt=" Portrait of Yulia Makovskaya. (1890). Author: K.E. Makovsky." title="Portrait of Yulia Makovskaya. (1890).

...for a very long time they dressed according to the children's fashion of those years and grew curls that my father liked so much ...". В будущем будет поэтом, художественным критиком и организатором художественных выставок, издателем.!}

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0015.jpg" alt=" Portrait of Yulia Pavlovna Makovsky in red. (1881). Author: K.E. Makovsky." title="Portrait of Yulia Pavlovna Makovsky in red. (1881).

A year later, a daughter, Elena, will be born in their family, who later became an artist, whose teacher will be Ilya Repin himself. And in 1883, the Makovsky family again replenished - son Vladimir, who was baptized by Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich, brother of Alexander III.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0004.jpg" alt="Family portrait. 1882. Author: Konstantin Makovsky." title="Family portrait. 1882.

While the Makovsky family lived either in Paris or in Italy, he traveled extensively in Europe and Asia, collecting material for his historical canvases. Visited in the family. And then one day, having arrived at his relatives, he announced that he had an illegitimate son. Neither Yulia Pavlovna nor the children forgave Makovsky's betrayal. Sergei was especially worried about the split in the family: he could not forgive his father for suddenly destroying their happy and friendly family.



And it happened in 1889, when Konstantin Yegorovich took several of his canvases to Paris to the World Exhibition, where he met 20-year-old Maria Matavtina, with whom a secret romance began. The fruit of their passionate love will be the birth of their son Constantine.

Two years later, the artist will have a second illegitimate child - daughter Olga, and in 1896 - Marina. And only five years after the birth of the last daughter, Konstantin Makovsky marries Maria Matavtina, and the court will legitimize their children. In 1900, in his new, already legal marriage, the fourth child was born - son Nikolai.

https://static.kulturologia.ru/files/u21941/0makovsky-0018.jpg" alt="Portrait of Maria Makovskaya (Matavtina). Author: Konstantin Makovsky." title="Portrait of Maria Makovskaya (Matavtina).

Korovin is called the first Russian impressionist. His work amazed his contemporaries: some were shocked by the negligence and seeming clumsy strokes, others caught the main thing - the play of light and shadow, the colorist's innovation. The first called the works of Konstantin Korovin decadence and daub, the second, looking at the amazing landscapes and still lifes of the artist, saw the features of genius.

One of the few contemporaries who recognized signs of talent in the painter's works was. The singer called the artist "in painting." At that time, few agreed with Chaliapin, but 3-4 decades after Korovin's death, his juicy, light-filled and life-filled paintings were recognized as the works of a real master.

Childhood and youth

The future painter was born into a wealthy merchant family. Grandfather, an Old Believer and a merchant of the first guild, was called the Moscow “king of drivers”. Mikhail Korovin kept the postal route and disposed of hundreds of coachmen. The son of a merchant and the future father of the artist - Alexei Korovin - received a university education and was a very gifted person. Talent for drawing from the sons of Kostya and from his father.


Alexei Korovin married a noble bride - a noblewoman Apollinaria Volkova, an educated girl with progressive views. But family happiness did not last long. The country was rapidly developing railway communication, the coachmen, plying the postal routes, became a thing of the past. The business built by Korovin Sr. did not bring profit, a rich merchant's house in Moscow went under the hammer. The Korovins moved to Mytishchi.

Little Kostya liked the rural expanse, but his father, who got a job as a factory accountant, plunged into a severe depression that ended in suicide. Despite poverty, the mother gave her children an education.


Konstantin's older brother for 3 years - Sergey Korovin - became a student at the Moscow School of Painting. Korovin Jr. soon joined him: 14-year-old Kostya chose architecture, but a year later he transferred to the faculty of painting, which was led by a landscape painter.

Kostya idolized his mentor, but Alexei Kondratievich, who was rapidly drinking heavily, was fired. For the young artist, parting with his beloved teacher was the first life disappointment: Kostya left the school and went to St. Petersburg to the Art Academy. Withstood 3 months: study seemed dead and boring.


Konstantin Korovin returned to the capital and to his native school, where he took the position of Savrasov. Soon Vasily Dmitrievich filled in the heart of the young painter the empty place of his beloved teacher.

The mentor introduced the talented student to the philanthropist, and he invited Kostya to the Abramtsevo estate, which became the center of the cultural life of the capital. In the hospitable estate of Mamontov, the cultural elite of Russia gathered, there were,.

Painting

The creative biography of the modernist opens with "Portrait of a chorus girl", written in the early 1880s. The picture amazed contemporaries, who called it the "first sign" of a new direction - impressionism. Repin, who saw the Korovinskaya chorus girl, was so amazed by the color scheme, the boldness of the technique and the idea that he demanded to immediately show the creator of the work.

Mamontov, confident that the portrait was painted by a Spaniard (Russian masters did not differ in such courage and freedom), was surprised to learn that a 22-year-old compatriot painted the chorus girl. The philanthropist invited Konstantin Korovin to the estate. It is noteworthy that Korovin discovered the innovative direction himself, not knowing about its appearance in France. The artist visited Paris 4 years after painting "Portrait of a Chorus Girl".


At the time of the creation of the canvas in Russia, at the peak of popularity were the Wanderers, committed to realism, vitality and the educational mission of art. The portrait of an ugly girl sitting in an unnatural pose, painted in rough strokes, did not teach anything. The work was perceived as a challenge, a mockery of the beautiful. But Konstantin Korovin accepted criticism philosophically and did not depart from the chosen style.

The painter created the first works in an innovative manner in the village of Zhukovka, at the dacha of the teacher Polenov. These first impressionistic works were united as "Zhukov's cycle".


The main goal of Konstantin Korovin was the transmission of light and air on the canvas. The painting "At the Tea Table" is a clear proof of the achievement of the task. The composition of the canvas is built in accordance with the artistic direction of impressionism - like a random frame. The characters are relaxed, the center of the composition is displaced, the right edge of the canvas seems to be cut off.

The paintings of modernists are difficult to fit into the framework of one genre: they have the features of a portrait, landscape, still life. This can be seen in Korovin's early impressionist works In the Boat and Moskvoretsky Bridge.


At Mamontov, the painter met Serov. Colleagues set off to travel around the North, where the works "Arctic Ocean" and "Village in the North" appeared. The painting "Winter in Lapland" was purchased by a gallery owner.

A trip to the Crimea and Gurzuf with Mamontov inspired the paintings “Crimea. Gurzuf" and "Pier in Gurzuf". Korovin made sketches while traveling around the Black Sea by car: he stopped in places he liked and sketched landscapes.


In 1888, the philanthropist financed the trip of Konstantin Korovin to France. The famous canvases “Paris. Boulevard des Capucines”, “Paris Cafe”, “After the Rain”, which the artist was inspired by the ancient city on the banks of the Seine. In Paris, so beloved by the painter, he met the Impressionists, who impressed him with the technique of color reproduction. After returning, the master taught at the Moscow School of Painting and after a couple of years became an academician.

Konstantin Alekseevich is known as a talented creator of still lifes with flowers, of which there are dozens in his legacy. Lilacs and roses were especially fond of the master. Like all modernist works, Korovin's still lifes and landscapes are best viewed from a distant perspective. The artist paid tribute to all the seasons of the year: his gallery presents autumn, winter, spring and summer.


The outbreak of the First World War forced Korovin to go to the front, where he advised the military on camouflage. Konstantin Korovin escaped repression after the October Revolution: after the decline of business, the family moved from the merchant class to the bourgeois class.

The new government entrusted the artist with the organization of auctions and exhibitions, accounting and preservation of art monuments. Korovin taught at state workshops, collaborated with theaters and willingly painted scenery. Having accepted the changes in the system, Konstantin Alekseevich eschewed politics, running either to the Crimea or to a dacha in Okhotino near Yaroslavl.


In the 1920s, politics came close to the master: the dacha was taken away, the metropolitan apartment was “compacted”. In 1923, at the insistence of the modernist, he immigrated to France, explaining his departure by the need to treat his son.

Life in the once beloved Paris proved difficult. Modernists went out of fashion, lack of money was exhausting, friends remained in Russia. Konstantin Korovin yearned for his homeland, for Abramtsevo and Okhotino. To all the misfortunes was added the loss of vision. To occupy himself, the artist took up his memoirs, discovering the gift of a writer in himself. He wrote stories and memoirs, filling the longing for working with paints.


Leaving Russia, the painter left the work of the gallery owner Kreitor. He turned out to be a swindler and, taking the canvases, disappeared. Today, paintings by the first Russian impressionist can be seen in the Russian Museum in the city on the Neva.

Personal life

The painter met his future wife Anna Fidler in his youth. Constantine depicted his beloved girl in the painting "Paper Lanterns". He met secretly with the chorus girl Anna Korovin, and the couple went down the aisle after the birth of their first child. Soon the boy died, for which Konstantin Korovin blamed himself: poverty reigned in the house, there was no money for doctors and medicine for his sick son.


Romance evaporated from the relationship of the spouses, but Korovin could not leave his wife and son. An outlet for him was a relationship with Nadezhda Komarovskaya. The actress is called the common-law wife of Konstantin Alekseevich.

Konstantin Korovin broke up with his beloved woman, having immigrated to Paris with Anna and his second son Alyosha, an invalid. At 16, Alexei was hit by a tram and was left without legs. The boy took over from his father a talent for drawing and became an artist.


The son's depression and his wife's illness (angina pectoris) became a constant source of suffering for Konstantin Korovin. He was torn in search of money, exhausted, looking for a part-time job. An irritated wife and a gloomy son were waiting for him at home, the artist did not find support and understanding from his relatives.

Death

The artist died unexpectedly: he died in September 1939 due to a heart attack on a Parisian street. Matt was 77 years old. They buried Konstantin Korovin in the cemetery of Sainte-Genevieve-des-Bois. Two years before his death, he confessed to a friend that he felt terrible loneliness.


The funeral of Russia's first modernist was like seeing a beggar off his last journey: there were no people willing to give money for a worthy farewell to Korovin.

In 1950, 11 years after the death of his father, Alexei Korovin took his own life.

Artworks

  • 1883 - "Portrait of a chorus girl"
  • 1888 - "In the boat"
  • 1888 - "At the tea table"
  • 1890 - "Paris cafe"
  • 1894 - "Winter in Lapland"
  • 1896 - "Paper Lanterns"
  • 1906 - Boulevard des Capucines
  • 1913 - "Arctic Ocean"
  • 1914 - "Pier in Gurzuf"
  • 1914 - "Moskvoretsky Bridge"
  • 1915 - "Lilac"
  • 1916 - "Bazaar"
  • 1917 - "Crimea. Gurzuf
  • 1921 - "Portrait of F. I. Chaliapin"
  • 1922 - "Still life with a blue vase"
  • 1923 - "Roses"
  • 1930 - "Winter Landscape"
  • 1938 - "Self-portrait"


Similar articles