Silvestr Feodosiyevich Shchedrin
(1791-1830)
Silvestr Shchedrin, the greatest Russian landscape-painter of
the early nineteenth century, was the most striking exponent of the realist
aspirations of the time.
The Shchedrin family, like the Bryullov and Ivanov families was
a kind of an artistic dynasty. Silvestr Shchedrin was born in St. Petersburg.
His father, Feodosy, was a well-known sculptor, professor and assistant
rector of the Academy of Arts. And his uncle Semyon, a professor of landscape
painting, gave the young Silvestr his first lessons. ‘I remember being
taken to the Hermitage by my uncle when I was still young’, Shchedrin recalled
later. ‘I walked past most of the pictures and only stopped to look at
Canaletto.’
Shchedrin’s first successful art lessons in the family were soon
backed up by training at the Academy. From 1800 his teachers were M.M.
Ivanov, F.Ya. Alexeyev, whose main interest at that time was in painting
views of St. Petersburg, and the architect Thomas de Thomon, who taught
him the laws of perspective.
In 1811 Shchedrin graduated with a gold medal. His graduation
piece was the landscape *View from Petrovsky Island in St. Petersburg*,
which conformed totally to the classical spirit. However, the young artist’s
interest in depicting concrete, rather than ‘invented’ views soon asserted
itself in his first large-scale works: View of Tuchkov Bridge From Petrovsky
Island (1815, TG) and View of the Stock Exchange From the Bank of the Neva
(1817,RM).
In 1818 Shchedrin was among the first four pioneers to be sent
to Italy. His travel notes and his letters home, written with gentle humor,
reveal the artist’s lively mind and powers of observation.
Having settled in Rome, Shchedrin set about painting views of
the city. He was attracted by the Coliseum, his approach to which was far
from classic. ‘Shchedrin wrote, ‘ordered me to paint its portrait of a
building’ the real-life ‘model’, with its powerful architectural forms
and distinctive stonework, was excellently conveyed.
In the picture New Rome. Holy Angel Castle (1825, TG) the artist
reveals the beauty in simple and ordinary things. The grand structures
of the Holy Angel Castle and St. Peter's Cathedral become part of the general
city scene. Shchedrin tried to convey the play of light on the rocks and
walls, on the greenery and the boats - light which united all these objects,
sometimes making them shine or sparkle, sometimes concealing or emphasizing
their contours. He softened the highlights on the water and made the shadows
transparent and airy. The buildings give the impression of being wrapped
in air. In this painting Shchedrin passed from heavy, dark-brown shades
to light silvery-greys. 'with great difficulty I have extricated myself
from these dark shades,' he wrote to the sculptor S. Galberg.
In a small, iridescent landscape Lake Albano in the Outskirts
of Rome (1823-24, RM), the water gleams with silver, while the verdure
seems airy and suffused with pink sunlight. Light acts like a magician,
transforming everything. This painting is one of Shchedrin's masterpieces.
The artist's seascapes are particularly poetic. He was enraptured
by Naples and its surroundings. On his first trip there from Rome, which
lasted from June 1819 to the spring of 1821, Shchedrin lovingly described
the colorful life on the seafronts, the merry-making and carnivals, and
the scenery of southern Italy...
'...Once again I am staying on the Santa Lucia Embankment - the
best spot in the whole of Naples. The view from my window is magnificent:
Vesuvius a stone's throw away, the sea, mountains, picturesquely situated
buildings, people constantly in motion, walking and working - what better
place for a landscape painter!'
In View of Naples (1819, TG) Shchedrin depicted himself among
the townsfolk on the busy embankment. The artist was often to be seen with
the fishermen and peasants in the coastal villages. A jolly, sociable
person, he was on amicable terms with local population, and portrayed them
in numerous pictures.' ... Within a few days I acquired a host of friends
- farmers, retired soldiers and others ... these people were so fond of
me that having discovered when I usually arrived they came ahead of time
not to miss me...'
At this time Shchedrin made friends with Karl Bryullov and Konstantin
Batyushkov - it was with the latter that he stayed while in Naples. Together
with Orest Kiprensky he began work on a portrait of A.M. Golitsyn.
Having ultimately settled in Naples in June 1825, Shchedrin undertook
trips to Sorrento, Capri, Vigo and Amalfi. His landscapes and seascapes
ranked among the finest plein air paintings anywhere at that time, especially
the series which included On the Island of Capri (1826, TG), The Small
Harbour at Sorrento (1826, TG) and The Large Harbour at Sorrento (1827,
TG). Nature here accords with man, whose natural and contemplative life
takes its course in the 'happy moments of being'.
About Covered with Vines (1828, TG) and Grotto at Sorrento (1829,
TG) rely on the contrasts between the shaded area and the sunlit open countryside.
The midday sun penetrates the dense greenery of the olives and grapevines,
picking out the people's figures and patches of vegetation amid the shadow.
In his later period, Shchedrin moved away from chiaroscuro tonal
painting in favour of heightened colour range, as is clearly illustrated
by Small Harbour in Sorrento. Evening (1826, TG) and Moonlit Night at Naples
(1828, TG).
Shchedrin gained popularity in Italy and his landscapes sold well.
Meanwhile the dates of his stay abroad had long since expired. He was put
off by the thought of a future in the formal atmosphere of the St. Petersburg
Academy of Arts. But he did not entirely abandon thoughts of the returning
home: 'I am most displeased by your advice not to go to Russia,' he wrote
to S Galberg.
Despite a serious, progressing illness, the artist did not lose
his joie de vivre and sense of humor. His last letters from Italy were
full of hopes for a recovery and for a return home. But he never did return
to his native country.
In October 1830 he died, and a monument by S. Galberg was erected
on his grave in Sorrento.
Silvestr Shchedrin gave his own lyrical interpretation of the
scenery of Italy - something that eluded many of his contemporary Italians.
His landscapes contained that poetic affirmation of the beauty of simple
things which was so characteristic of Russian portraiture and genre-painting
of the first half of the nineteenth century.
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