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Click here for Ivan Aivazovsky's
biography...
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky (1817-1900)
was born in the family of a merchant of Armenian origin in the town
of Feodosia, Crimea. His parents were under strained
circumstances and he spent his childhood in poverty. With the help
of people who had noticed the talented youth, he entered the
Simpheropol gymnasium, and then the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts,
where he took the landscape painting course and was especially
interested in marine landscapes. In the autumn of 1836 Aivazovsky
presented 5 marine pictures to the Academic exhibition, which were
highly appreciated. In 1837, Aivazovsky received the Major Gold
Medal for Calm in the Gulf of Finland (1836) and The Great Roads at
Kronstadt (1836), which allowed him to go on a long study trip
abroad. However the artist first went to the Crimea to perfect
himself in his chosen genre by painting the sea and views of Crimean
coastal towns. During the period of 1840-1844 Aivazovsky, as a
pensioner of the Academy of Arts, spent time in Italy, traveled to
Germany, France, Spain, and Holland. He worked much and had many
exhibitions, meeting everywhere with success. He painted a lot of
marine landscapes, which became very popular in Italy: The Bay of
Naples by Moonlight (1842), Seashore. Calm (1843), Malta. Valetto
Harbour (1844). His works were highly appreciated by J.W.M. Turner,
a prominent English landscape and marine painter. In the course of
his work, Aivazovsky evolved his own method of depicting the motion
of the sea - from memory, without preliminary sketches, limiting
himself to rough pencil outlines. Aivazovsky's phenomenal memory and
romantic imagination allowed him to do all this with incomparable
brilliance. The development of this new method reflected the spirit
of the age, when the ever-increasing romantic tendencies put an
artist's imagination to the front. When in 1844 the artist
returned to St. Petersburg, he was awarded the title of Academician,
and became attached to the General Naval Headquarters. This allowed
him to travel much with Russian fleet expeditions on different
missions; he visited Turkey, Greece, Egypt, America. From 1846 to
1848 he painted several canvases with naval warfare as the subject;
the pictures portrayed historical battles of the Russian Fleet The
Battle of Chesme (1848), The Battle in the Chios Channel (1848),
Meeting of the Brig Mercury with the Russian Squadron... (1848).
Towards the 1850s the romantic features in Aivazovsky's work
became increasingly pronounced. This can be seen quite clearly in
one of his best and most famous paintings The Ninth Wave (1850) and also in Moonlit
Night (1849), The Sea. Koktebel. (1853), Storm (1854) and others. The process,
which determined the development of Russian art in the second half
of the 19th century, also affected Aivazovsky. A new and
consistently realistic tendency appeared in his work, although the
romantic features still remained. The artist's greatest
achievement of this period is The Black Sea (1881), a picture
showing the nature of the sea, eternally alive, always in motion.
Other important pictures of the late years are The Rainbow (1873),
Shipwreck (1876), The Billow (1889), The Mary Caught in a Storm
(1892). Aivazovsky left more than 6000 pictures, which are of
very different value. There are masterpieces and there are very
timid works. He failed to draw landscapes, could not draw a man.
Aivazovsky got good commissions and became rich. He spent much money
for charity, especially for his native town, he opened in Feodosia
the first School of Arts (in 1865), then the Art Gallery (in 1889).
He was a member of Academies of Stuttgart, Florence, Rome and
Amsterdam. |