| Vasily Ivanovich Surikov (1848-1916)
The epic works of Vasily Surikov are a magnificent manifestation of the creative genius of the Russian people. In breadth and power of imagery, his canvases are a match for the musical images of Glinka and Mussorgsky. Surikov came of Cossack stock and was born in the Siberian town of Krasnoyarsk. His father's family came to Siberia from the Don area, with Yermak; his mother came from the old Cossack family Torgoshin, and it was from these roots that the artist inherited his proud and freedom-loving character. Pyotr and Ilya Surikov and Vasily Torgoshin are mentioned among those who took part in the Krasnoyarsk uprising of 1695-98. Surikov was proud of his origins and wrote: 'I am a Cossack through and through, with a pedigree going back over two hundred years.' His parents were also in a broader sense artistically gifted. His father, a passionate lover of music, played guitar excellently and was considered the best amateur singer in Krasnoyarsk; his mother, a wonderful embroideress, had inborn artistic taste. The source of Surikov's conception of beauty was Siberia, with all its severity, with its sometimes cruel customs, its courageous people, the 'old Russian' beauty of its girls, its majestic scenery and its living history. 'Siberia,' he recalled, 'brought me up from childhood with the ideals of historical types.' His first attempts at drawing also took place in his early childhood: 'I was six, I remember—I drew Peter the Great from an engraving. The colours I did myself: blue for the uniform and crimson for the lapels.' The first person to notice the boy's abilities was N. V. Grebnev, the teacher of drawing at the Krasnoyarsk district school, which Surikov finished in 1861 with a certificate of merit. Grebnev gave him the task of copying etchings from the old masters. Surikov later spoke with gratitude of his first tutor: 'Grebnev nearly wept over me, teaching me to draw.' In order to support the family after his father's death, Surikov had
to work as an office clerk. Sometimes, as he recalled later, he even had
to 'paint Easter eggs for three rubles per hundred' and once he took a
commission to paint an icon entitled *The Holy Virgin's Feasts*.
Surikov made great progress at the Academy, extracting the maximum benefit from the lessons. His achievements were particularly spectacular in composition—so much so that his colleagues called him 'the composer'. The development of his natural gifts was owed much to Pavel Chistyakov, who trained many masters of Russian art. At the Academy Surikov successfully executed a series of compositions on classical themes, and also a picture from early Russian history—*A Prince's Judgment* (1874, TG). In April 1875 the artist embarked on a program work for a gold medal—*The
Apostle Paul Expounding the Dogmata of Christianity to Herod, Agrippa,
His Sister Bernice and the Roman Proconsul Festus* (TG). Compositionally,
the picture does not venture beyond academic canons, but it does already
show the artist's interest in his characters' psychologies In Chistyakov's
words 'the antediluvian dunderheads failed the best pupil in the whole
In 1878 Surikov married Elizaveta Share, granddaughter of the Decembrist P. Svistunov. The artist's happy family life and relative material security allowed him to 'do his own thing', and that was to paint scenes from Russian history. 'Arriving in Moscow, I found myself in the centre of the life of the Russian people and immediately found my bearings.' he recalled subsequently. It seems the very walls of the ancient city spoke to him. Figures from the past rose up in his imagination, followed by the plan of a picture which was for him 'staggering'. *The Morning of the Streltsi's Execution* (1878-81,TG) is truly staggering. Not because of the horrors of death. but because of the power of the characters and the tragic nature of one of the crucial periods in Russian history. The subject of the picture comes from the Petrine age and reflects one of the episodes in the struggle for the throne between Peter the Great and his sister Sophia, the outcome of which was the defeat of Sophia and the streltsi who supported her. 'It was not the execution I wanted to convey, but the solemnity of the last minutes,' wrote Surikov about this painting. The streltsi are full of dignity as they go to meet their deaths; they have lost the fight and ask for no mercy. In the crowd, 'which is agitated like "the noise of much water" ', Surikov singles out interesting characters. Particularly expressive is the ginger-bearded streltsi whose wrathful gaze—almost the axis of the whole omposition, meets Peter's eyes. The architectural landscape with St. Basil's Cathedral which seemed 'blood-stained' to Surikov, is more than a historical background: it is compositionally tied in with the motion of the masses. The artist conveys the 'solemnity of the last minutes' not only in the proud beauty of the Russian people, but in the picture's colourscheme, which captures the shades of the dawn sky, the colours of the clothes and the cathedral, the patterns on the shaft-bows and even the sparkling rims of the cartwheels. This picture already manifested the great merits of Surikov as a colourist. 'When I thought up the picture,' he wrote, 'all the faces emerged at once, and the colouring along with the composition. Everything springs from the canvas itself'. The painting was bought by Pavel Tretyakov as soon as it was exhibited,
and the artist
While Streltsi showed the tragedy of the masses, made up of the fates of individual people, in *Menshikov in Beryozovo* (1883, TG) Surikov concentrated his attention on one strong character whose personal drama echoed the tragedy of Russia. However, how localised the episode may have been which suggested to Surikov the subject of his future picture, the image he went on to create assumed historical importance ... We see the interior of a low wooden cottage dimly lit by a candle, with a tiny window covered in whimsical frosty patterns. Menshikov's huge figure seems cramped in this enclosed space, under low ceilings: this strong and imperious man is accustomed to a different scale of life. With him are his three children, who were to have been the perpetrators of his ambitious designs. Were to have been... The situation is dramatic. And Surikov brilliantly catches in it the beauty and subtlety of human feelings, conveying them in the appearance of the characters and in the colouring. 'Of all Surikov's dramas, Menshikov is the most "Shakespearean" in its treatment of man's eternal, inexplicable fates,' wrote Mikhail Nesterov. The first study for *Boyarynya Morozova* appeared in 1881; Surikov began work on the picture itself three years later, having meanwhile painted *Menshikov in Beryozovo* and made a trip abroad. Here the artist chooses as his heroine Feodosiya Morozova, a fanatical follower of archpriest Avvakum, an active adherent of the old-believer movement in the Russian church. Once again, the tragic fate of a strong, passionate figure is, for the artist, indivisible from the fate of the people, who opposed the church reforms introduced by Patriarch Nicon, seeing in them an encroachment on the customary run of their lives, on their rites and—in the final analysis—on their spiritual freedom. In this picture Surikov wished to show a person who was not only herself capable of strong feelings hut could also arouse such feelings in others. The artist wrote: 'I cannot understand the actions of individual historical figures without the people, without the crowd. I have to drag them into the street.'The 'crowd', however, is not faceless, but is made up of vivid individuals. All the components of the picture—form, colours, linear composition—have a tremendous emotional effect. The work is national not only in subject (based on events of the seventeenth century) but in its national types, its architecture, its winter landscape, and its treatment of colour, whose rich, limpid strength is akin to the Russian people's sunny perception of the world. In *Boyarynya Morozova* (1887, TG) Surikov succeeded in expressing the inner firmness, selflessness, courage and beauty of Russian man. The painting was first shown at the Fifteenth Peredvizhniki Exhibition and was showered with the highest praise. Vladimir Stasov wrote: 'Surikov has now produced a painting which in my opinion is foremost among all our pictures on subjects from Russian history. Nothing in that sphere of our art which sets itself the task of illustrating Russian history has gone as far or as high as this picture.' In early 1888 the artist suffered a grave shock: his wife died. Consumed by grief, he almost abandoned art. A testimony to Surikov's state at that time was the painting *The Healing of a Man Blind From Birth*, which was first seen at a Peredvizhniki Exhibition in 1893. Heeding the advice of his relatives, Surikov and his daughters went
to Siberia, to Krasnoyarsk. 'I moved on from dramas to the great joy of
living.' wrote the artist in retrospect. 'I have always had leaps like
that into cheerfulness. I painted the genre picture of the game village
at that time. I returned to my childhood memories... ' Noticeable in the
picture *The Taking of a Snow-Built Fortress* (1891, RM), which appeared
after three historical canvases, were the roots of the artist's great love
of living, which helped him overcome grief and adversity. The heroes of
his works are also endowed with this love of
In 1891 Surikov returned to Moscow, bringing with him, in his own words,
'an incredible strength of spirit'. Now he began to work on a new canvas—
*Yermak 's Subjugation of Siberia* (1895, RM). 'Two elements encounter
one another'—these words of Surikov's stick in one's mind when one sees
the grand battle scene depicted here. The people appear in all the grandeur
of their exploitation. The army is led by the legendary Yermak, whose figure
is at once singled out and indivisible from the Cossacks. The distinguishing
feature of the Cossack force is its unity, its oneness. In contrast, the
army of Kuchum, seized by panic, appears disconnected. While glorifying
the courage of the Russians, Surikov also sees deserving features in the
enemy and stresses the distinctive beauty of the 'aliens'. Modelling them
from living Khakass and Ostyak people, Surikov remarked: 'They may have
snub-noses and high
The epic character of the picture derives not only from the import of the subject (the clash of two historic forces) and not only from the concise expression of the movement of an enormous mass of people, but also from the manner of painting. In Nesterov's assessment, Surikov's painting was 'firm, thick and rich, seized out of the essence of the action, flowing by necessity'. *Suvorov Crossing theAlps* (1899, RM) developed the theme of the military heroism of the Russian people, which was started in Yermak's Subjugation of Siberia. The appearance of the painting at the Twenty-seventh Pcrcdvizliniki Exhibition coincided with the centennial of the event which it depicted. Surikov had begun work on it in 1895, and in 1898, at the site of the historic crossing in Switzerland, he made etudes for it. 'The main thing in the picture is the movement,' wrote the artist, 'and the whole-hearted bravery of the men, obedient to the command of their general. 'The landscape—mountain-peaks disappearing in a shroud of clouds, some dark, some shining with a pale cold blue—allows the spectator to sense the difficulty of the crossing and to feel the significance of the feat achieved by Suvorov's men. Surikov spent several years working on his last large-scale work, *Stepan Razin* (1907-10, RM). This painting caused him some trouble, and he returned to it even after it had been shown in public. In 1909 the artist wrote in a letter: 'As far as Razin is concerned, I am still working on it, emphasizing the characterisation of Razin. I went back home to Siberia and there I found the realisation of my dream of him.' The picture impresses one by its sense of freedom and space. Its beauty
lies in the rippling mother-of-pearl colours, in the air suffused with
sunlight and in the overall poetic quality. The beauty of nature helps
to bring out the deep pensivencss of the ataman, isolating him in a way
from the tipsy merriment of the Cossacks. Evidently Surikov's aim was to
convey the inner state of this strong, rebellious character, and this fact
is brought out by his words to the artist
The last historical figure to be painted by Surikov was Pugachov. A study dating from 1911 shows the leader of the eighteenth-century peasant uprising locked up in a cage . . . An exhibition mounted in 1912 by the Union of Russian Artists included Surikov's *The Tsarevna Visits a Nunnery* (TG). The fusion of historical and genre art in this picture sets it alongside similar works by Andrei Ryabushkin and Sergei Ivanov. Surikov's work as a portraitist is of considerable importance, especially his wonderful etudes for his historical canvases and for *The Taking of a Snow-Built Fortress*. The characterisation in *Portrait of Doctor Yezersky* (1911, private collection), *Portrait of a Man with a Sore Ann (Hand?)* (1913, RM) and his *self-portraits* of the 1913 (TG) and 1915 (RM) are powerful, and his female portraits are extremely beautiful. Surikov died on 6 March 1916 and was buried beside his wife in the Vagankovskoye
Cemetery in Moscow.
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