Vladimir Pavlovich Krantz | |
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Born | February 17, 1913 Mozdok, North Caucasus, Russian Empire |
Died | July 20, 2003 Saint Petersburg |
Nationality | Russian |
Field | Painting |
Training | Leningrad Civil Engineering Institute |
Movement | Realism |
Vladimir Pavlovich Krantz (Russian: Влади́мир Па́влович Кра́нц; February 17, 1913, Mozdok, North Caucasus, Russian Empire - July 20, 2003, Saint Petersburg, Russia) - a Soviet Russian painter, lived and worked in Leningrad - Saint Petersburg, regarded as one of representatives of the Leningrad school of painting,[1] most famous for his lirical landscape paintings.
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Vladimir Pavlovich Krantz was born February 17, 1913 in Mozdok, North Caucasus. His mother's origin was Cossack, and his father came from nobility. His ancestor, German born Von Rosen Krantz, was sent in exile to the Caucasus after the December uprising in Petersburg in 1825.[2]
In 1935 Vladimir Krantz entered at the Architectural department of Leningrad Civil Engineering Institute, which he graduated in 1940. After graduating he worked as an artist-decorator, and painted in oils independently.
In 1941 Vladimir Krantz was drafted into the Red Army and took part in the second world war of the Soviet people against Nazi Germany and its allies.
After the war, Vladimir Krantz returned to his work in the Painting and Design Group of Enterprises in Leningrad and perfected his art at the studio of the known Leningrad artist and art educator Samuil Nevelshtein.
Since 1957 Vladimir Krantz has participated in Art Exhibitions. He painted a lot in suburbs of Leningrad and in the ancient Russian town of Staraja Ladoga in the Leningrad Region. Vladimir Krantz painted landscapes, cityscapes, genre and still-life paintings. In the 1970s his art was recognized by the public. The Japanese collector Yoko Nakamura acquired series of his landscapes, and the artist became well known abroad.
Vladimir Krantz painted the modest beauty of the Northern Russia and seascapes in the Crimea, working at the Academic Dacha in Tver province. There he became better acquainted with many famous artists. This broadened his artistic horizons and enrich the technical arsenal. Among them was a well-known masters of landscape painting Nikolai Timkov, Dmitry Maevsky, Ivan Varichev, Vladimir Ovchinnikov, and Vecheslav Zagonek.
As a master of lyrical landscapes Vladimir Krantz considered Nature as a his main teacher. He preferred painting "ala prima," finishing his landscape in one session. He never went down to the rough naturalism or unwarranted detailing both in drawing and coloring.
Vladimir Krantz was a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists (before 1992 named as the Leningrad branch of Union of Artists of Russian Federation) since 1972. His personal exhibitions were in Leningrad in 1964, 1977, and 1991, and in Saint Petersburg in 1992, 1995, and in 2002.
Vladimir Pavlovich Krantz died in Saint Petersburg on July 20, 2003. His paintings reside in art museums and private collections in Russia, Japan, the United States, Germany, and throughout the world.[3]
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