Evgraf Fedorovich Krendovsky
Evgraf Fedorovich Krendovsky (Ukrainian: Євграф Федорович Крендовський, Russian: Евграф Фёдорович Крендовский; 1810, Kremenchuk — 1870s, unknown) was a Russian portrait, genre and interior portrait painter.
Biography
Little is known of his background. As a young man he worked at the police station in Arzamas, where he attended the famous art school operated by Alexander Stupin. From 1830 to 1835, he lived in Saint Petersburg and studied with Alexey Venetsianov. At that time, he is known to have presented an exhibition at the Imperial Academy of Arts.[1]
In 1835, family issues forced him to return to Kremenchuk, where he became the drawing tutor for a local landowner's family in nearby Poltava Province.[1] Four years later, he was awarded the title of "Free Artist".[2] Despite being relatively isolated in the provinces, some of his best-known works were created during the 1840s, some of which are now in the Tretyakov Gallery.
Slightly more than twenty paintings constitute his entire known output.[1] His last extant work is dated 1853. His fate after that point is unknown, although it is generally believed that he died sometime during the 1870s.
Selected paintings
-
Ukrainian Woman
(date unknown) -
Alexander Bashilov with His Family (1830)
-
To the Hunt (1836)
-
The Artist's Daughters (1845)
References
Further reading
- М. N. Shumova. Русская живопись первой половины XIX века (Russian Painting of the First Half of the Nineteenth Century). Моscow, Искусство (1978) p. 92
External links
Media related to Evgraf Fedorovich Krendovsky at Wikimedia Commons
|