Dmitry Grigorievich Levitsky
(1735-1822)
Dmitry Levitsky was one of the most important and versatile artists
of the eighteenth century. His brilliant, refined portraits most fully
reflected the philosophical and aesthetic conceptions of the second half
of the century, and the age's belief in the power of a reason and the integrity
and nobility of human nature.
Levitsky came of old Ukrainian stock and was born in Kiev. His
father Grigory Levitsky was a hereditary priest who did amateur painting
and etching, and it was he who taught his son the first skills of painting.
An important role in the boy's development was the arrival in Kiev in 1752
of the well-known St. Petersburg artist A. Antropov to decorate the St.
Andrew Cathedral. The Levitskys, father and son, got to known Antropov,
and it was possible that they took part in the decoration of the cathedral,
since Antropov was empowered to take on local masters as assistants.
In 1758 young Dmitry Levitsky went to St Petersburg and became
Antropov's pupil. He lived in his house and for several years worked together
with him. In 1762 he went with Antropov to Moscow, where he painted the
Triumphal Gates erected to mark the coronation of Catherine II. Here Dmitry
Levitsky worked with the leading artists of the day, and there can be no
doubt that the young artist benefited greatly by such contact. A year later
Levitsky went his own way. Having inherited from Antropov not only painting
skills but also disinterestedness, honesty and dilligence, he began his
independent creative career.
Dmitry Levitsky's name first became known at an exhibition in
the Academy of Arts in 1770, at which he exhibited six masterly portraits.
One of the most interesting of these works was his portrait of A. Kokorinov
(RM), the designer of the building which housed the Academy of Arts, and
its first director. The portrait belonged to the typical eighteenth century
genre of the full-dress portrait, a genre that required splendor and solemnity.
In this type of portrait, the apparel, gestures and attitude of the model,
the attributes surrounding him, and the composition of the painting, with
the figure in the central position, were supposed to underline the subject's
high social standing. All this is present in the portrait of Kokorinov,
in which certain tranquility and serenity can also be felt, due to the
restrained color combinations. The architect's thoughtful face is painted
lovingly with the stress on the human dignity and nobility of his character.
Levitsky received the title of academician, and from 1771 for
seventeen years he took a class in portrait painting at the Academy of
Arts.
In the seventies and eighties Levitsky was at the peak of his
talent and fame, and constantly received commissions from the tsarist court.
In the 1773 he painted P. Demidov (TG). The unusualness of the portrait
was to some extent due to the originality of the subject's personality:
Demidov was renowned for his eccentricities but at the same time he was
a highly educated man, who donated enormous sums of money to the cause
of enlightenment. This work is distinguished by its combination of showiness
in the positioning of the figure, with the simplicity of Demidov's appearance
- he is depicted in the ceremonial attitude against the background of a
traditional colonnade. He is surrounded by everyday objects, such as pots
of flowers and a watering can, which are reminders of Demidov's interest
in gardening. His informal dress strengthens the intimate flavour of the
work.
Levitsky's search for more life and naturalness in the portrayal of
people found expression in a series of portraits of girls from the Smolny
Institute, founded by Catherine II with the aim of bringing up 'a new kind
of woman' - well-bred and educated. Seven portraits commissioned by the
empress were completed between 1773 and 1777.
In his portraits of the Smolny girls, the artist introduced the element
of 'plot', showing the models in action so as best to display their character
traits. The girls are portrayed performing concert numbers. Ye. Nelidova,
who was well known for her artistic talent, dances and sings couplets;
in her smile, her glance and her movements there is animation and cheerful
coquetry. N. Borshchova dances briskly and spiritedly, while the movements
of A. Levshina, a serious, dreamy girl, are smooth and slow. G. Alimova
plays harp, turning to the spectator with a polite, well-mannered smile.
Charming, and with a delicate, intelligent face, Ye. Molchanova recites
poetry.
This series includes two double portraits - F. Rzhevskaya and
N. Davydova, and Ye. Khrushchova and Ye. Khovanskaya. The latter is particularly
expressive in its characterization. The girls are acting out a pastoral
scene: Khrushchova is playing a shepherd-boy, Khovanskaya a shepherdess.
Levitsky bases the portraits on the juxtaposition of their individual qualities:
Khovanskaya is shy, timid and a little constrained in her movements; Khrushchova
is more forward, with a pert smile and playful gesture.
Though originally he had no overall plan for the series of portraits
of the Smolny girls, Levitsky succeeded in producing a unified suit, whose
common theme was the charm and by the use of conventional theatrical or
landscape background, with the human subject predominating. They are all
characterized by decorative coloring and subtle use of refined tones, yet
each portrait has its own distinctive color key.
These works display Levitsky's talent for creating a decorative
ensemble, intended to adorn a place hall, and his understanding of the
portrait as a large-scale compositional picture. (The whole series is now
displayed in the Russian Museum, Leningrad.)
Levitsky's mastery manifested itself in many of his later canvases,
especially in his Portrait of Catherine II the Legislatress, which he was
commissioned to paint by the Chancellor A. Bezborodko (1783, RM).
The portrait of Catherine II is essentially a historical painting,
in which the content is put across by a system of allegories. Such use
of imagery was characteristic of the classical style, which was established
at that time in the Academy of Arts. A description of the portrait
by Levitsky himself has been preserved, in which he says that Catherine
is depicted in the temple of the goddess of Justice; by burning poppies
at the altar she 'sacrificed her own precious peace for the peace of all';
the order of St. Vladimir underlines her services to the country; the open
sea visible in the distance, the Russian flag and Mercury's warder on a
shield, all represent protected trade.
The molding of the artist's views was greatly influenced by his close
contact with a circle of progressive thinkers and writers (V. Kapnist,
G. Derzhavin, A. Olenin and others), one of the more eminent of whom was
Levitsky's friend N. Lvov a man of exceptional education and wide-ranging
abilities, Lvov constantly spoke in favour of national art and its important
social role. It was he who suggested to Levitsky how he should portray
Catherine II. It is interesting that in his ode *The Apparition of the
Tartar Prince*, depicting Catherine, the poet Derzhavin gives poetic version
of Levitsky's portrait:
From the clouds she descended
And appeared, a priestess
Or a goddess, before me;
Her white streaming dress
In silver did flow,
Her bosom was aureate,
Her crown was aglow...
At this time Levitsky painted a series of portraits of the Russian nobility:
the writer A. Khrapovitsky (1781, RM), A. Vorontsov (late 1780s, RM), N.
Lvov (1789, RM). These are very simple, small-scale works. The figure is
usually portrayed in a natural attitude against a neutral, blank background.
In these works Levitsky gives a sober, objective characterization of his
contemporaries, bringing out their essential physical and mental qualities
and emphasising the national type.
Among Levitsky's best works is his portrait of the famous French
philosopher Denis Diderot (1773, Geneva Public Library), who visited Russia
on the invitation of Catherine II, Diderot is portrayed in a gown, without
a wig; his old man's face is drawn with great care, and his eyes reflect
his clear mind and concentration. Diderot appears to have liked the portrait,
as he bequeathed it to his sister.
Levitsky's female portraits are extremely beautiful, and each
has its own distinctive range of color. The niece of the Polish king, the
society beauty Ursula Mniczeck, for example, is painted in subtle shades
of gold and light blue (1782, RM); in the portrait of the quick-witted
Italian adventures and singer Anna Devia Bernucci (1782, TG) the color
relationships are simpler, while her complicated toilet introduces a rather
'garish' element. The most attractive of the female images created by Levitsky
is that of M. Diakova (1778, TG), which is tender, light and full of charm
and womanliness The poetic qualities of this portrait liken Levitsky to
that other great painter of the eighteenth century, Fyodor Rokotov.
In 1787 Levitsky gave up his teaching post at Academy. Towards
the end of the century his position changed dramatically and he was no
longer considered the leading artist of his times. The old master experienced
great material hardships. He lived in solitude, began to get involved in
freemasonry and became more and more religiously minded.
In 1807, thanks to the efforts of the conference secretary of
the Academy of Arts A. Labzin, Levitsky returned to the Academy as a member
of the Council. But soon he was overtaken by great misfortune: he began
to lose his sight. His last work was painted in 1812.
Dmitry Levitsky died in 1822 in St. Petersburg and is buried in
the Smolensk Cemetery.
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