Christ in the Desert

For the monastery, see Monastery of Christ in the Desert.
Christ in the Desert
Artist Ivan Kramskoi
Year 1872
Type Oil on canvas
Dimensions 180 cm × 210 cm (71 in × 83 in)
Location Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

Christ in the Desert, or Christ in the Wilderness[1][2] (Russian: "Христос в пустыне") is a painting by Russian artist Ivan Kramskoi, reflecting the Fasting of Christ. Kramskoi was offered a professorship for the painting by the Russian Academy of Arts Council, but having learned that in the beginning of 1873, rejected it (he had been expelled from the Academy earlier, and chose to keep his "youthful commitment to independence from the Academy").[3] Subsequently it became one of the favourite paintings of Pavel Tretyakov, who bought it for his gallery in the year the painting was finished.[3]

History

The theme of Christ's temptation had attracted Kramskoi already in the early 1860s. In that period he made the first sketch of the composition.[3] The first version of Christ in the Desert is dated to 1867, but turned to be unsuccessful. Kramskoi realized that the choice of vertical format was inappropriate.[3] He opted for the horizontal format and introduced the pallid rocky desert in the background.

Kramskoi described the early history of the painting in his letters to writer Vsevolod Garshin.

The painting

Christ in the Desert is one of Kramskoi's Jesus-themed paintings, the other being Rejoice, King of the Jews and Herodias. Kramskoy used primarily cold colors to reflect the chill dawn in the background. The thoughtful figure of Christ, wearing a dark wrap and red tunic underneath is slightly shifted to the right of the center. Kramskoi wrote: "To the question "this is not Christ, how do you know he looked like that?", I permitted myself to reply "but even the actual, living Christ has not been recognised".[3] The painting emphasizes Jesus' human constituent of hypostatic union and features a mind struggle instead of action. Because the horizon divides the canvas plane almost in half, the figure of Jesus dominates the painting space and harmonizes with stern wilderness simultaneously.

Kramskoi sold his work to Tretyakov for 6,000 rubles.

Reception

The painting received a wide feedback and appeared at the Peredvizhniks' second exposition of 1873. Pavel Tretyakov wrote: "I liked Kramskoi's Saviour very much... that's why I was harrying up to purchase him, but many people did not appreciate him much and the others did not at all. In my opinion this is the best painting in our school recently; maybe I am mistaken".[4] Critic Vladimir Stasov noted that a "sorrowful note sensibly resounds in the general physological array of the work".[5] Vsevolod Garshin outlined the "expression of immense moral force, hatred against evil and complete resoluteness to fight it".[6] According to Ivan Goncharov, who wrote "Christ in the Desert. A Painting of Mr. Kramskoi" (original Russian title: "Христос в пустыне». Картина г. Крамского"), "the entire figure seems to have diminished a bit from its natural size, contracted, not from starvation, thirst and bad weather, but from internal, inhuman insight to his thought and will during the struggle of forces of spirit and flesh".[5] He also emphasized that "there is nothing festive, heroic, victorious — the future fate of the world and of all livings is concealed in that miserable, small being, in pauper appearance, under the rags, in humble simplicity, inseparable with true majesty and force". The Russian art researcher Georgy Wagner wrote the article "On the Interpretation of I. N. Kramskoi's Painting "Christ in the Desert" (Russian: "Об истолковании картины И.Н. Крамского "Христос в пустыне").

References

  1. "Ivan Kramskoy". The American Society of Portrait Artists. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
  2. "Jesus Christ in the Wilderness by Ivan Kramskoi". Art Studio. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Христос в пустыне (1872) Крамской (in Russian). Kramskoy.info. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  4. Татьяна Юденкова. Неустанное служение. К истории коллекции П.М.Третьякова (in Russian). Наше Наследие. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Крамской И. "Христос в пустыне" (in Russian). Near You. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  6. Немировская, М.А. Иван Николаевич Крамской. —Л.: Художник РСФСР,1969, с. 25