A.G. Venetsianov (1780-1847)
One of the founders of the Russian genre painting, Alexei Venetsianov,
was born into a not particularly well-off merchant family in Moscow. His
father traded in fruit-bushes. There is evidence that he also dealt in
pictures, and this may have helped awaken the young Venetsianov's interest
in art. The future artist had his first lessons in drawing in a private
Moscow boarding school.
It was when he came to St. Petersburg in 1807 that he began to like
painting seriously. He was taught by Vladimir Borovikovsky, in whose studio
he worked until 1810. At the same time he studied and copied works of classical
art in the Hermitage.
Venetsianov's earliest works included portraits of A. I. and A. S. Bibikov
(1805-09, RM). His interest in portraits was not accidental—it was in this
genre that most innovations were made in the early nineteenth century.
The young artist's successes were immediately noticed. The majority of
his early portraits were done in pastel, a technique little used by Russian
artists. They are unassuming, simple works, totally lacking in showiness.
In
1811 Venetsianov painted one of his best early works, *Self-Portrait* (RM),
for which he was awarded his first academic title—Associate of the Academy—and
shortly afterwards, for his portrait of *K. I. Golovachevskv, Inspector
of the Academy of Arts, with Three Pupils* (1811, RM), he was made an academician.
Such early sudden recognition of the artist was due entirely to the merits
of his works. His self-portrait, painted in restrained shades of
olive, stood out from self-portraits by other artists of this particular
time because of its impartiality and naturality. The portrait of Golovachevskv
is in a more traditional line and suffers from being rather didactic, but
nonetheless the treatment of the images is winningly cordial and warm.
Also at this period Venetsianov did some interesting works in the field
of graphic art. He attempted to start up Russia's first satirical magazine—Journal
of Caricatures, 1808—in which he hoped, by means of drawings, to 'improve
morals and educate society in the best traditions'. But the very first
issue of this publication was suppressed by the government. The reason
for the ban is thought to have been an etching to accompany *Derzhavin's
ode: The Nobleman* - the significance of which far exceeded that of mere
illustration. The satirical portrayal of an obese indolent nobleman, and
the sympathetic depiction of his suppliants—a wounded soldier, a widow
and child—made this etching extremely topical and socially poignant.
Venetsianov returned more than once to satirical etchings. During the
Patriotic War of 1812 he produced a series of topical sheets. In his etchings
*The French Coiffeur* and *French Education*, for instance, he lampooned
the Gallomania of the Russian nobility.
The artist found his real vocation, however, neither in graphics nor
in the art of portraiture, which had brought him fame. His talent lent
itself to quite a different area. Venetsianov was fully aware of this,
and halfway through his career he found the strength to give up working
as a portraitist. On one of his portraits we find a remark: 'Venetsianov
hereby renounces portrait painting, March 1823.'
At the beginning of 1819 the artist had gone to the small estate of
Safonkovo in Tver, Gubernia. Here, at the age of forty, he more or less
went back to square one. He was fascinated by the common people, by serfs
and peasants who had heroically fought Napoleon's troops and who retained
their human dignity and nobility despite the yoke of serfdom. And although
from time to time he did still do some portraits, Venetsianov's main interest
from the 1820s on was in genre art.
However, this new stage in the artist's work was not merely the result
of fortuitous circumstances in his private life. The beginning of the nineteenth
century was a time when all the progressive members of Russian society
were striving to bring about a transformation of the country and the enlightenment
of the people. It was then that a society was set up in St. Petersburg
with the noble aim of spreading literacy among the common people. This
was the prevailing atmosphere in which Venetsianov's art took a new turn.
Rural life provided him with a wealth of material and opened up a new world—the
world of the beautiful lyrical Russian countryside.
Venetsianov's first pictures in the new genre—the pastels *Beet-Picking*
(ca. 1820, RM) and *The Reaper* (1820, TG)—eloquently testify to the fact
that he was making a conscious effort to achieve realistic authenticity,
considering the painter's main goal 'to represent nothing otherwise than
as it is in nature... to obey nature alone, without adding the manner of
any artist'.
Central to Venetsianov's work is the painting *The Threshing-Floor*
(1821, RM), on which he worked for more than three years. Depicting a commonplace
scene, the artist gives an extremely realistic impression of the enclosed
area, which is illuminated by a flood of light pouring in from either side.
However, the desire to record everything precisely 'as it is in nature'
led to a certain dryness and immobility in the portrayal of the human figures.
The *Threshing-Floor* was the first in a series of works on peasant
themes. As portrayed by Venetsianov, the Russian peasants are people filled
with beauty and nobility of mind, with moral purity and inner integrity.
In his desire to poetize Russian man and to affirm his dignity, the artist
tended to idealize the life and work of the peasantry, without showing
the actual hardships of serf labour. But the very fact of treating 'low
—from the point of view of official aesthetics— theme of peasant life'
is worthy of notice. Like no other artist in the first half of the nineteenth
century, Venetsianov asserted his right to depict the common folk who worked
the land.
His talent really flourished in the twenties and thirties, when he produced
such masterpieces as *Ploughing in Spring*, *Harvesting in Summer* (both
1830s, TG), *Children in the Field* (early 1830s, RM) and several sketches.
The working peasants in Venetsianov's canvases are beautiful and full
of dignity. In *Ploughing in Spring* the theme of work is interwoven with
those of motherhood and the beauty of the Russian countryside. The artists
best and most accomplished genre work—*Harvesting in Summer*—is marked
by a lyrical epic perception of life. While in the first picture Venetsianov
depicted a spring landscape with vast expanses of fields, leaves just appearing
on the trees, and light clouds in the blue sky, in the second he allows
one to feel the height of a Russian summer—a time of toil in the villages—with
shining golden cornfields and a scorching sky. Both canvases are painted
in bright, clear colors.
One of Venetsianov's most poetic works, full of serenity and peace,
and love of man and nature, is the small painting *Sleeping Shepherd Boy*
(1823-26, RM). The smooth, calm rhythms of the plains, the gently sloping
hillsides covered in slender young trees, solitary firs, a low-banked stream—all
these dear familiar motifs the artist found in his native countryside.
In Venetsianov's paintings the landscape is not merely a background but
plays an active role in conveying moods and in the overall conception.
In 1824 an exhibition of Venetsianov's paintings in St. Petersburg evoked
an enthusiastic response in Russian progressive circles. 'At last we have
an artist who has used his wonderful talent to depict things purely Russian,
to describe the things all around him, which are so close to his heart
and to ours...' wrote P. P. Svinyin, the founder of the Russian Museum
in St. Petersburg.
In the years that followed, Venetsianov painted many portraits of peasant
girls—*A Peasant Girl*, *Peasant Girl with Mushrooms in the Wood*, *Pelageya*
(1820s, RM), *Girl with Embroidery*, *Peasant Girl with Cornflowers* (1830s,
TG) and others. For all their differences, these works are united by the
artist's aspiration to express his new ideas about beauty in art, about
popular beauty, inspired and noble.
However, these works did not bring Venetsianov recognition in official
circles. The Academy of Arts did not conceal its distaste for this artist
who was drawn towards things they considered base and bound up with the
common people. He longed to teach at the Academy, to be able to pass on
his knowledge and experience to young artists. 'But I am forever denied
the possibility of obtaining any kind of post at the Academy of Arts',
he wrote bitterly. His hopes of teaching 'thousands of hopefuls' came to
fruition only later, when, at his own expenses, he opened an art school
for peasants in the village of Safonkovo. The list of talented and original
artists discovered and trained by Venetsianov included N. Krylov, Ye. Krendovsky,
A. Tyranov, S. Zaryanko, G. Soroka and many others. Several of them he
managed to release from serfdom. His pupils expanded and in many ways deepened
the themes and images of their teacher, enriching genre painting with new
content.
Venetsianov continued to work prolifically in the 1840s. Among his best
works from this period were *Sleeping Girl*l (Gorky State Art Museum),
*Fortune-Telling* (RM), *Girl with Accordeon* (Gorky State Art Museum)
and *Peasant Girl Embroidering* (TG). He had many more plans hut his sudden
death in 1847 left them unrealised.
Venetsianov's importance in the history of Russian art is extremely
great. He was one of the first artists who dedicated themselves to the
portrayal of the peasantry and who declared genre painting to he a fully
fledged important sphere of art. His canvases contained popular images,
full of inspiration and human dignity.
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