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Tag Archives: Modest Mussorgsky

Ilya Repin’s Horse

02 Saturday Feb 2019

Posted by michelinewalker in Russian Art, Russian Music, The Human Condition

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Album of Natalia Nordman-Severova, Balalaika, Burlak, Feodor Chaliapin, Ivan Kramskoi, Modest Mussorgsky, Natalia Nordman, Realism, Repin's horse, Song of the Volga Boatmen, The Penates, Wednesday at Penaty

Horse by Ilya Repin (Wikiart.org.)

Repin’s Horse

The horse featured above is an artwork by one of Russia’s foremost portraitists, Ilya Repin (5 August [O.S. 24 July] 1844 – 29 September 1930). No date is given and I haven’t found a signature. We do not know when Horse was completed. Nor do we know whether Repin wanted this work to be shown.

It is lovely, but it differs from other paintings by Repin. To my knowledge, the colour indigo was not used to depict horses in 19th-century Russia. Nor were blues, greens, and turquoise, a mixture. The background, sand with a golden hue, is almost traditional. It could be used as the background to a portrait. However, in Horse, the background is primarily flat. Moreover, were it not for a larger number of gold-coloured speckles in the sand, in the lower part of the painting, Repin would not have ‘sat’ his horse. You may have noticed also that Repin’s horse does not cast a shadow and that its snout as well as its lower legs are ‘interrupted.’ We are therefore reminded of Japonism and childhood. Horse is classified as a realist work of art. It is a realist work of art in as much as we know the figure it portrays is a horse, but the horse is of a different colour.

“A Moral Social Purpose”

In 1878, Repin joined the Society of the Peredvizhniki or Itinerant’s Society, which can be traced back to the “Rebellion of the Fourteen,” when 14 young artists left the school after refusing to paint mythological paintings for their diplomas. “In 1891 he resigned from the Itinerants’ Society in protest against a new statute that restricted the rights of young artists.” (See Ilya Repin, Wiki2.org. & Ilya Repin, Wikiart.org.)

However, Repin was not a rebel. By and large, he followed in the footsteps of his teacher, Ivan Kramskoi. He may have been influenced by Ivan Bunakov, with whom Repin’s father helped him apprentice. With Bunakov, a local icon painter, “he restored old icons and painted portraits of local notables through commissions.” (See Wiki2.org.) However, although he was familiar with impressionism, and “admired some impressionist techniques, especially their depictions of light and color, he felt their work lacked moral social purpose, key factors in his own art.”

A Portrait Artist

“Repin had a set of favorite subjects, and a limited circle of people whose portraits he painted. But he had a deep sense of purpose in his aesthetics, and had the great artistic gift to sense the spirit of the age and its reflection in the lives and characters of individuals.”
(See Ilya Repin, Wiki2.org.)

Repin was a portraitist, though not exclusively. Philanthropist and art lover and collector Pavel Tretyakov, a patron of Repin, expressed a need for depictions of his contemporaries. Repin’s portrait of composer Modest Mussorgsky (21 March 1839 – [16 O.S..] 28 March 1881), one of the Five, is unforgettable. It was painted shortly before the composer’s death. Mussorgsky’s family lost half of its estate in 1861, the year serfs were emancipated, which precipitated a crisis. Mussorgsky also joined a group indulging in an “intense worship of Bacchus.” (See Modest Mussorgsky, Wiki2. org.). Alcoholism destroyed him. This portrait suggests compassion on the part of Repin.

Ilya Repin‘s celebrated portrait of Mussorgsky, painted 2–5 March 1881, only a few days before the composer’s death (Wiki2.org.)

The Common People

Repin’s “paintings show his feeling of personal responsibility for the hard life of the common people and the destiny of Russia.” (See Ilya Repin, Wiki2.org.)

Repin’s Barge Haulers on the Volga may well be his most famous comment on the life of “the common people.” The barge haulers were called burlaks and attracted Repin’s attention between 1870 and 1873. They resembled convicted men condemned to row galleys.

The industrial revolution may have liberated the barge haulers, but if it did, liberation was probably achieved in the manner serfs were emancipated. Many former serfs had to pay for the land they had tilled and had fed them. Former serfs were also employed in factories where they worked 15 hours a day, which I suspect was the fate of burlaks. (See Bloody Sunday, Wiki2.org.)

haulers-on-the-volga-1873.jpg!large

Barge haulers on the Volga by Ilya Repin, 1873 (Russian Museum and Wikiart.org)

 

Burlak by Ilya Repin, 1870-1873 (WikiArt.org.) 

1902 Song of the Volga Boatmen record by Feodor Chaliapin  ✔

The Penates, Finland

In 1872, Repin married Vera Shevtsova. His marriage lasted ten years. Natalia Nordman (14 December 1863 – 30 June 1914) was “the love of Repin’s life.” (See WikiArt.org.) They lived in her house, called Penaty (the Penates), in Kuokkala, Finland. According to Wikiart.org., Repin designed and built the Penates (See Wikiart.org.). I am therefore confused. However, the common denominator is that Ilya Repin and Natalia Nordman-Severova lived at the Penates. On Wednesday, the couple received guests. Repin made sketches of their guests and Natalia Nordman was the keeper of the album. The Album is entitled Portrait from the Album of Natalia Nordman-Severova.

1024px-Repino

The Penates, the Repin House-Museum in Kuokkala, now Repino, Saint Petersburg (Wiki2.org.)

Conclusion

Repin chronicled a golden age: Alexander Pushkin, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Leo Tolstoy, the Five, Ilya Repin, Isaac Levitan, Alexei Savrasov. Yet it was a bleak world. Russia was at a turning-point. Peasants had lived in communes, the Mir, but the industrial age would impair the Emancipation of Serfdom, 1861. As noted, several former serfs worked in factories, where working conditions were unacceptable. Building a railroad could be the source of enormous wealth for Russians who had money to invest, but did former serfs have money?

So Horse makes sense. It is fanciful, but not too fanciful. In fact, it is little more than, as noted above, a horse of a different colour. However, horses of a different colour may constitute not a new, but a gentler reality.

RELATED ARTICLES

  • Mussorgsky’s Old Castle (17 November 2018)
  • Mussorgsky & Repin: a new Dawn (10 November 2018)

Sources and Ressources

  • Ilya Efimovich Repin (a collection of paintings)
  • Balalaika (Wiki2.org.) (description)

Love to everyone 💕

 

Song the Volga Boatmen
Natalia Nordman by Ilya Repin, 1900

© Micheline Walker
2 February 2019
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Mussorgsky & Repin: a New Dawn

19 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by michelinewalker in American Civil War, Russia, Russian Art, Russian Music

≈ 49 Comments

Tags

Agrarian Society, Bloody Sunday, February and October Revolutions, Ilya Repin, Industrial Revolution, Modest Mussorgsky

unexpected-visitors-1888.jpg!Large

They did not expect him by Ilya Repin, 1884 – 1888 (Wikiart.org)

“It is generally believed that by depicting various reaction of young man’s household Repin tried to show diverse but mostly positive attitude of society toward revolutionary movements of that time. Actually, under strict censorship of Czarist Russia, it was a political declaration disguised as an everyday genre scene.” (Wikiart.org.)

The Russian Revolution

In the second half of the 19th century and the first quarter of the 20th century, Russia changed dramatically. The Emancipation of serfdom, in 1861, led to a major social upheaval. Ironically, several former serfs had to pay for the piece of land they had been cultivating for centuries, but more importantly, an agrarian society was industrialized. (See Industrialisation of Russia, Wiki2.org.) Many Serfs became factory workers whose working conditions were unacceptable.

Matters culminated in a massacre known as Bloody Sunday, 22 January 1905. From 3,000 to 50,000 factory workers marched towards Saint Petersburg’s Winter Palace to deliver a petition (←text) to Tsar Nicholas II. Some 4,000 demonstrators, an approximate number, were gunned down or injured by the Imperial Guard. Others were arrested.

By the end of Word War I, there would no longer be a Russian Empire. Two revolutions occurred in 1917: the February Revolution and the October Revolution. The Bolsheviks, under Vladimir Lenin, took over during the October Revolution, sometimes called the Bolshevik Coup.

Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (18 May [O.S. 6 May] 1868 – 17 July 1918) had abdicated on 2 March 1917. He and his family were executed during the night of 17 – 18 July 1918.

The painting above is immensely foreboding.

But let us listen to another part of Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina, its introduction.

—ooo—


Mussorgsky’s Dawn on the Moskva-River
Introduction to Khovanshchina

Barge Haulers on the Volga by Ilya Repin, 1873 (Wikiart.org.)

© Micheline Walker
19 November 2018
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Mussorgky’s Old Castle

17 Saturday Nov 2018

Posted by michelinewalker in Russian Art, Russian Music

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Ilya Repin, Isaac Levitan, Modest Mussorgsky, The Five, The Old Castle, Une larme

640px-RepinMussorgsky

Modest Mussorgsky by Ilya Repin, 2 – 5 March 1881 (WikiArt.org.)

I eliminated my post on the Emancipation Reform of 1861. Although the Emancipation Reform of 1861 had deleterious effects on many Russians, Mussorgsky (21 March 1839 – 28 March 1881) became an alcoholic because extreme behaviour was fashionable in his days. (See Modest Mussorgsky, Wiki2.org.)

However, those who turned to the “worship of Bacchus” did not necessarily become alcoholics. Mussorgsky did, and it led to his death.

Repin‘s portrait of Mussorgsky, the eyes in particular, is one of his finest paintings.

Love to everyone 💕

—ooo—

The Old Castle 

Une larme (A Tear)

above-the-eternal-tranquility-1894

Above the Eternal Tranquillity by Isaac Levitan, 1894 (WikiArt.org.)

© Micheline Walker
17 November 2018
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Mid-November…

12 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by michelinewalker in Art, Russia, Russian Music

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Ivan Shishkin, Khovanshchina, Modest Mussorgsky, Peredvizhniki movement, Russian Realism, The Five

Oak Grove by Ivan Shishkin, 1887 (Wikiart.org)

It was a slow day and a cold day. I could not write. But I could sense winter approaching. Je n’ai qu’une saison. C’est l’hiver.

Yvan Shishkin (25 January 1832 – 20 March 1898) was a Russian landscape painter associated with the Peredvizhniki movement.

Forest Path by Yvan Shishkin, 1863 (Wikiart.org)

The video I have inserted combines images by Yvan Shishkin and music by Mussorgsky, one of the Five. You will hear bells.

RELATED ARTICLES

  • Alexander Borodin, Russia’s “Five” (5 November 2018)
  • All the Bells will Ring (13 July 2015) ←
  • Marie: the Words to a Love Song (20 June 2015)
  • Scheherazade, or the Power of Storytelling (31 July 2012)

Love to everyone 💕

Mussorgsky — Prelude to Khovanshchina (1872-1880)

Portrait of Shishkin by Ivan Kramskoi, 1873 (Wiki2.org)

© Micheline Walker
11 November 2018
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A Progress Report

23 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by michelinewalker in Russian Music, Sharing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Great Gate of Kiev, Modest Mussorgsky, Pictures at an Exhibition, Viktor Hartmann

Great Gate of Kiev by Hartmann

Great Gate of Kiev by Viktor Hartmann (architect)

A Progress Report

I am or was in the process of selling my apartment or, to be more precise, my one-ninth of a small apartment building. The first person who visited made an offer I considered acceptable.

However, the co-owners of this building will not allow anyone to take a mortgage to pay for his or her ninth of the building. It has to be paid in full. My portion was bought by proxy. What a mistake!

At any rate, I have not been able to write since learning that I am unlikely to find a buyer for my property.

Bells in Russian Music

However, we have more bells in Russian music. Modest Mussorgsky was one the “Five” composers, the “mighty handful,” who wanted to give an identity to the music of Russia.

I have used Hartmann’s design in an earlier post, but in a different context and in relatively finer days for the Ukraine.

RELATED ARTICLES

  • All the bells will ring (13 July 2015)
  • Viktor Hartmann & Modest Mussorgsky (8 September 2012)

I send all of you my kindest regards. ♥

Modest Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition
Douglas Gamley, arranger & conductor
 

Ilya_Repin_-_Портрет_композитора_М_П_Мусоргского_-_Google_Art_Project© Micheline Walker
23 July 2015
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Modest Mussorgsky
by Ilya Repin
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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A Musical Tribute to my Father

13 Wednesday Nov 2013

Posted by michelinewalker in Art, Music, Sharing

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Douglas Gamley, Great Gate of Kiev, Modest Mussorgsky, musical tribute, Pictures at an Exhibition, Viktor Hartmann

Kiev, Victor Harmann

Plan for a City Gate in Kiev, by Viktor Hartmann (1834 – 1873) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

MY FATHER DIED AT NOON TODAY, 12 November 2013

He was 95. We had asked the nurses not to let him suffer and to please allow him to go. So he died peacefully.

My father was very fond of music. It was the love of his life. Modest Mussorgsky‘s (21 March 1839 – 28 Marc 1881) Pictures at an Exhibition (Suite 10, “The Great Gate of Kiev”) was a beloved composition. He introduced me to Mussorgsky when I was very young.

My father’s favourite composer (after Beethoven) was Hector Berlioz (11 December 1803 – 8 March 1869), but it’s too soon for a Requiem: La Grande Messe des morts  (op. 5). My father will never die.

RELATED ARTICLE

  • Viktor Hartmann, Modest Mussorgsky & the News, 8 September 2012 

Mussorgsky

Modest Mussorgsky, by Ilya Repin (Photo credit: Medici.tv)

 
Modest Mussorgsky–Douglas Gamley 
Pictures at an Exhibition, Suite 10 
“The Great Gate of Kiev,” 
Douglas Gamley (conductor)  
 

Viktor Hartmann

Viktor Hartmann

 
© Micheline Walker
12 November 2013
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Viktor Hartmann & Modest Mussorgsky

08 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by michelinewalker in Art, Music, Russia

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Abramtsevo Colony, Modest Mussorgsky, Pictures at an Exhibition, Plan for the Gates to Kiev, Russian Revival, The "Mighty Handful", The Five, Viktor Hartmann

Plan for a City Gate in Kiev, by Viktor Hartmann

Viktor Alexandrovich Hartmann (5 May 1834, St Petersburg – 4 August 1873, Kireyevo near Moscow) was a Russian architect and painter who lived during a period in European and Russian history when nationalism flourished. The quest for a national identity included a search for a national esthetics that had been expressed in some Golden Age, and would again be expressed in music, art, design, and other art forms. Hartmann’s plan was for a city gate in Kiev is an attempt to capture an inherently Russian and Ukrainian esthetics.

The Search for a National  Identity

For instance, as I may have mentioned elsewhere, in what would become a unified Germany, the brothers Grimm scoured the German-language states collecting its German-language folklore and planting the seeds of what would become a discipline: ethnology. But Russia was an exceptional case in that the country stretched thousands of kilometers. Esthetically and otherwise, it was therefore rooted in more than one culture.

Music: the “mighty Handful”

In music, the “mighty handful,” Mily Balakirev (the leader), César Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Borodin, attempted a revival of Russia. They were looking eastwards and, in the years 1856-1870, they met in Saint Petersburg. But the Russian Revival was not limited to music. It also included the fine arts, architecture as an art form, and other cultural areas.

Painting, Design and Architecture

Viktor Hartmann was therefore associated with the Abramtsevo Colony. The Abramtsevo Colony had been purchased in 1870 by Savva Mamontov, a patron of the arts who promoted a Russian Revival. Abramtsevo was the hub of revivalism.

Viktor Hartman’s foremost contribution to the Russian Revival was his Plan for the Gates to Kiev (Ukraine), a design rooted in what he perceived as inherently Russian (and Ukrainan).

Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an exhibition

Hartmann was Mussorgsky’s closest friend, but the two were forever separated when Viktor Hartmann died from an aneurysm at the early age of 39. An exhibition of Hartmann’s paintings was organized which inspired Modest Mussorgsky‘s Pictures at an Exhibition (1874), a suite for the piano that painted musically and therefore constitutes a union of music and painting suggesting synesthesia. It is c the piano, as it was composed by Mussorgsky. However, French composer Maurice Ravel  transformed the work for piano into an orchestral work of music. To hear it, please click on the following link: Mussorgsky/Ravel and enjoy yourselves. In this post, Mussorgsky’s piano suite is played by Sviatoslav Richter. By the way, listen for the sound of bells.

Modest Mussorgsky, by Ilya Repin[i] 

_________________________
[i] This portrait was painted in 1881, a short time before Mussorgsky’s death from alcoholism. Mussorgsky’s wealthy family was impoverished when serfdom was abolished in 1861. He joined a group advocating extreme behaviour.
 
composer: Modest Mussorgsky (21 March 1839 – 28 March 1881)
pianist: Sviatoslav Richter (20 March 1915 – 1 August 1997) 
 

320px-Modest_Musorgskiy,_1870© Micheline Walker
8 September 2012
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