Vasily Polenov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vasily Dmitrievich Polenov (Russian: Поленов Василий Дмитриевич) (20.5 (1.6) .1844, St.Petersburg, - 18.7.1927, Polenovo in the Tula Oblast) was a Russian landscape painter associated with the Peredvizhniki movement of realist artists.

Polenov studied under Pavel Chistyakov and in the Imperial Academy of Arts from 1863 to 1871. He was the pensioner of academy of arts in Italy and France, where he painted a number of pictures in the spirit of Academism on subjects taken from the European history ("The Right of mister", 1874, Tretyakov gallery); at the same time he worked a lot in the open air.

Polenov's celebrated painting of a traditional Russian courtyard (1879).
Enlarge
Polenov's celebrated painting of a traditional Russian courtyard (1879).
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Polenov took part in the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878 as the war artist. Returning from the war, he joined the Peredvizhniki, taking part in their mobile exhibitions. His works won the admiration of Pavel Mikhailovich Tretyakov, who acquired many of them for his gallery.

In the late 1870s, Polenov concentrated on painting landscapes in the realist tradition of Aleksey Savrasov and Fyodor Vasilyev. He attempted to impart the silent poetry of Russian nature, related to daily human life.

He was the one of the first Russian artists who achieved a plein air freshness of color combined with artistic finish of composition ("The Moscow court yard ", 1878; "The Grandmother's garden", 1878; "Zarosshy pond", 1879). The principles developed by Polenov had a great impact on further development of Russian (and especially Soviet) landscape painting.

Polenov's sketches of Middle East and Greece (1881-1882) paved the way for his masterpiece, "The Christ and the Sinner" (1886-87), an interesting attempt to update picturesque system of academism. In the works of the 1880s, Polenov tended to combine New Testament subjects with his penchant for landscape. Since the 1870s, Polenov also turned to theatrical decoration. Most notably, he decorated Savva Mamontov's mansion in Abramtsevo and his Private Russian Opera. In 1910-1918, Polenov was involved into a folk theatre project.

Polenov was elected a member of St.Petersburg Academy of arts in 1893, and named a People's Artist of the Republic in 1926. For many years, he coached young painters in the Moscow Art School. His pupils included Abram Arkhipov, Isaac Levitan, Konstantin Korovin, and Alexandre Golovine. Polenov's mansion in Borok has been designated a national art museum.