Viktor Elpidiforovich Borisov-Musatov
(1870-1905)
Vikior Borisov-Musatov, who became known as the creator of what one
might call elegies in painting was the son of a railway official and was
born in Saratov. When he was three he fell and damaged his spinal cord,
and this childhood injury had a certain effect on the future artist's character:
even at an early age he tended to be dreamy and reserved and liked to be
alone.
In 1884 Borisov-Musatov entered the Saratov college, where he was taught
drawings by F. Vasiliev, and later by V. Konovalov, who arrived from St.
Petersburg. Both teachers noticed his unusual abilities, and soon Borisov-Musatov
left the college to concentrate himself seriously to painting. From Konovalov
he received his first technical skills and his first aesthetic values.
At this period he drew a great deal (mostly domestic scenes) and painted
the picture *A Window* (1886, TG), which gives a detailed, but almost illusory
impression of a corner of the garden as seen from a window of his house.
In August 1890 the young artist went to Moscow and joined the School
of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. Dissatisfied with his studies
there, he left after a year for St.Petersburg where he attended the Academy
as an external student and also the private studio of the well-known teacher
Pavel Chistyakov. In the spring of 1893, after an operation, the artist
had to leave St. Petersburg because of its climate and returned to Moscow
and the School there.
Borisov-Musatov usually spent the summers in Saratov, where he painted
a large number of etudes, principally landscapes. His success in painting
from nature is evident in the picture *May Flowers* (1894, RM). In this
sunny landscape one can feel the immediate fresh perception of life which
was so characteristic of Borisov-Musatov's work of this period.
In the autumn of 1895 the artist went to Paris. In order to complete
his artistic training he studied under the historical painter and teacher
Fernand Cormon - did a lot of drawing, and visited the Louvre—where he
particularly admired the Botticellis. Of the French artists he met, he
was closest to Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.
On his return to Russia three years later he settled once more in Saratov.
From now on his works began to show his own distinctive hand, his own vision
of the world.
Borisov-Musatov's career in art came on the threshold of a new century—a
complex period, rich in great creative personalities. And like Vrubel,
Nesterov, Serov and Levitan, he developed a distinctive, highly original
approach to art.
The real beginning of his career can be considered his *Self-Portrait
with Sister* (1898, RM), for which there is no analogy in Russian art.
The picture's composition is unusual—in the center is a pensive young girl
in an old-fashioned white dress, while the figure of the artist is partly
lopped off by the edge of the canvas. This introduces an element of fortuitousness,
recalling the pictures of the impressionists. The style of painting is
new; colour and form are
generalized— especially in the background landscape, which resembles
theatrical scenery. In this picture we see for the first time an expression
of Borisov-Musatov's dream of a perfect harmonious world; we see his attempt
to escape from the disorder of reality into an ideal world of his imagination.This
mood, which affected many members of the Russian intelligentsia at the
turn of the century, became the central theme of Borisov-Musatov's art.
His works
do not reflect any concrete historical period: 'it is just a beautiful
age', as the artist himself said.
The self-portrait was followed by a cycle of lyrical pictures—*An Autumn
Motif* (1899, Radishchev Art Museum, Saratov), *Untitled Motif* (1900,
TG), *Harmony* (1900, in collection of A. V. Gordon, Moscow). Here Borisov-Musatov
conveys the atmosphere of autumn's fading beauty and the quietness of old
country-estates; there is an aroma of past life, and the sad poetry of
a love long departed. The content of these works was to some degree inspired
by his summer trips to the estate of Sleptsovka, where he visited his godfather,
who was steward there; here, for the first time, he deeply felt the charm
of times gone by.
Borisov-Musalov reached the peak of his talent at the beginning of the
twentieth century, when he produced such works as *Spring* (1898-1901,
RM). *Tapestry* (1901, TG), *The Pool* (1902, TG) and *Emerald Necklace*
(1903-1904,TG).
This new creative period was opened by the picture *Spring* which, though
completed only in 1901, had been planned some time before. In this work
the artist completely got rid of all elements of action or narrative. The
emotive imagery is the result of the musical lines and the soft full colours.
Everything is in delicate harmony: the white cherry blossoms, the down
of dandelions in the fresh spring grass, the pink glow of the sky and the
light figure of a girl in a
lilac dress and red shawl.
In the summer of 1901 the artist visited Zubrilovka, an estate owned
by the Prozorovsky-Golitsyn princes. From that time on the landscape of
the Zubrilovka park was a constant source of inspiration and was incorporated
—poeticized by the artist's rich imagination in many of his works. Impressions
of this trip found their way into the picture *Tapestry*. Amid the decoratively
reproduced vegetation of the park are two women, caught in a light, elegant
movement, entirely at one with the landscape. The title of the picture
is significant: both the landscape and the figures are painted in a very
generalized flat manner, the colouring consists of large patches of soft
muled shades, and all this creates a shadowy, mirage-like impression. At
the same time the decorativeness and delicacy of the colouring evoke associations
with the noble colours of an antique tapestry. The success of the painting
at an exhibition of the Moscow Fellowship of Artists, which Borisov-Musatov
joined in 1899, helped greatly to bring about a change in people's attitudes
to his works, which were not at first understood or appreciated.
The artist's real masterpiece was *The Pool*, in which his poetic visions
were expressed in a perfect complete form. The picture was painted at a
happy time in the artist's life, when the girl he had long loved agreed
to marry him. In the summer of 1902 he stayed at Zubrilovka with his sister
Lena and his fiancee V. Alexandrova, and both girls posed for etudes and
sketches for the picture. In *The Pool* everything is balanced and conforms
to a distinct complex musical rhythm of lines and shapes. The colouring
too, is strictly rhythmical, based on the repetition of blues, soft lilacs
and greens in various combinations. The painting is both monumental and
lyrical; the most intimate workings of the artist's soul find expression
in an arrested wonderful moment, in a bewitching magical world of beauty.
In 1903-04 Borisov-Musatov painted the unusual panel entitled *Emerald
Necklace*, in which the female
figures moving against a background of variegated green are almost
woven into the pattern of grasses and leaves. Nature and man are so fused
together that an impression arises of the naturalness and primitiveness
of being.
In 1903 Borisov-Musatov painted two more canvases: *A Walk at Sunset*
(TG), which is serene and calm in mood, and *Ghosts* (TG), a sombre work,
full of melancholy and inner tension. *Zubrilovka Park* with women's shadows
now turns into a hazy mystical apparition: the fading colours seem to vibrate
and blur outlines.
In the spring of 1903 the artist married, and in December he moved with
his wife to Podolsk, nearer to Moscow and St. Petersburg. Early in 1903
Borisov-Musalov had joined the Union of Russian Artists, which was organized
in Moscow by a group of artists who left the 'World of Art' society. His
works were now gaining fame not only in Russia but also abroad: in Germany
and France, for example, there were successful exhibitions of his works.
More and more Borisov-Musatov was acquiring a taste for monumental paintings,
and in 1904-05 he did studies for decorative murals. The first group of
studies was done for a competition run by the Moscow Electric Traction
Board and was unsuccessful, but the second cycle—commissioned for a private
house—roused great interest. It consisted of four studies around the theme
of the seasons—*Spring Tale*, *Summer Melody*, *Autumn Evening* and *The
Deity's Dream* (TG). All are allegorical, and in their emotionality they
recall Borisov-Musatov's earlier works. The studies were not destined to
be turned into murals, however. In the spring of 1905 the artist left with
his wife and daughter for Tarusa on the Oka, where the last months of his
life and work passed. At Tarusa he painted his best landscapes: *On the
Balcony; Tarusa* (1905,TG), *A Nut-Tree* (1905,TG) and *Autumn Song* (1905,
TG), all of which are executed in gentle, melting colours and have great
power of generalization. Their basic theme— the fading of nature into autumn—was
close to the artist's state of mind.
At Tarusa Borisov-Musatov produced his final work—a large water-color
entitled *Requiem* (1905, TG), dedicated to the memory of his friend P.
Yu. Stanyukovich, the wife of the well-known writer, after her early death.
Requiem is a sad solemn work, symbolically conveying the joys and sorrows
of human life.
The work was fated to be the painter's own requiem too. On the night
of 25-26 October 1905 Borisov-Musatov passed away. He was buried in Tarusa,
on a high bank over the River Oka.

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