ideology and aesthetics in russian art

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ILYA REPIN: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART Volume II: Illustrations DAVID JACKSON PhD UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH 1990

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Page 1: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

ILYA REPIN: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

Volume II: Illustrations

DAVID JACKSON

PhD

UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH

1990

Page 2: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

11

I DECLARE THAT THIS THESIS HAS BEEN COMPOSED BY MYSELF

AND THAT THE WORK HEREIN IS MY OWN

DAVID JACKSON

Page 3: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

ABSTRACT

Ilya Repin (1844 -1930) was the leading member of the Russian realist school, the Peredvizhniki, widely regarded as the finest, and undoubtedly the most celebrated, painter of his generation. His artistic legacy has, however, long suffered both from a partisan brand of Soviet art history, which seeks to confirm his standing as a

precursor of the propagandist school of Socialist Realism, and a

Western disregard of the Peredvizhniki, based on misconceptions regarding its motives.

In the East a continual stress on the socio- political nature of

subject matter: content, ideology, meaning, has occasioned a lack of

regard for aesthetic considerations, superfluous to the utilitarianism of Soviet art, whilst acceptance of this view in the West, during a

century preoccupied with the non -narrative aspects of visual creation, has seen Repin stigmatised as an artistic ideologue, indifferent to

formal considerations, and therefore of small importance to the history of 19th century art. Repin's inconsistent, often contradictory views on the aims and nature of art, have assisted the efforts of

hagiographers and detractors alike, but these twin biases, which have long shadowed Russian art, have in Repin's case badly served a long and complex career by dint of crude or fallacious labelling. This

thesis aims to seek a more judicious appreciation of Repin's worth through a comprehensive survey of his life and work, utilising as

reference points the twin constituents of painting, form and content,

which find reflection in the East -West proclivity towards ideology and

aesthetics. The first chapter deals with Repin's early development, from his

birth in 1844 into a provincial military settlement, to his enrolment

in 1864 at the Imperial Academy in St. Petersburg, and considers the

relative influences of the Academy, the secessionist Artel based

around Ivan Kramskoy, and the emerging Peredvizhniki. Chapter 2 covers

Repin's residency in Paris, 1873 -1876, a period of conflicting

interests during which his allegiance to the nascent Russian school of

critical realism was called into question by contact with Western art.

The central chapters, 3-6, consider the chief genres within Repin's

output: history painting, scenes from contemporary life, political

themes, and portraiture, and consider to what degree ideological and

formal considerations shaped his mature work.

Chapter 7 deals with reactions to artistic innovations from the

1890s onwards, a period of avowed aestheticism on Repin's part, which

saw his resignation from the Peredvizhniki, transference to the

reformed Academy, and a brief liaison with Diaghilev's Mir iskusstva,

but which ended in acrimonious public disputes with the forces of

'modernism'.

Chapter 8 is devoted to the last decades of Repin's life, spent on

his estate on the Finnish Gulf, a period of physical decline and post -

Revolutionary isolation, during which he worked obsessively on

recurrent themes with a discernibly freer style.

The concluding chapter considers some of the East -West uses,

abuses, and misunderstandings which have dogged Repin's work, before

assessing the strengths and weaknesses, consistencies and

contradictions within his oeuvre, based on the findings of previous

chapters.

Page 4: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

iv

ILLUSTRATIONS

Due to the variable quality of Soviet reproductions and the difficulty of locating copies of lesser known works, some items have, regrettably, been left unillustrated. Those reproduced here are of the best quality possible under the circumstances. All dimensions, where known, are given in centimetres, height first. Unless otherwise indicated all works are by Repin and are in oil on canvas. The

abbreviations TG and RM denote the two major holders of Repin's works, the Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, and the Russian Museum, Leningrad.

For the sake of consistency I have followed the titles given to

Repin's works in the Catalogue in G. Sternin, Ilya Repin. Painting,

Graphic Arts, (Leningrad, 1985), 248 -283.

1. V.G. Perov. The Village Easter Procession. 1861. 71.5 x 89. TG,

2. V.I. Yakobi. Prisoners' Halt. 1861. 98.6 x 143.5. TG.

3. V.V. Pukirev. The Unequal Marriage. 1862. 173 x 136.5. TG.

4. Portrait of Anyuta Petrovna. 1864. Oil on cardboard. 17.3 x 10.5.

The Repin Museum, Penaty.

5. Portrait of Vera Shevtsova. 1869. 83 x 67. RM.

6. Reading for an Examination. 1864. 38 x 46.5. RM.

7. Portrait of D, V. Karakozov. 1866. Pencil.

8. Slavonic Composers. 1872. 128 x 393. The Tchaikovsky Conservatory,

Moscow.

9. Title page to Musorgsky' s 4ercxasl. Published by W. Bessel & Co,

St. Petersburg, 1872.

10. A Parisian Café. 1875. 189 x 118.5. Collection of M. Mansson.

11. A Man and a Woman at the Table. Two Women Seated. A Man Pulling on

a Glove. Study for A Parisian Café. 1873. Oil on canvas, pasted

on paper. 31.5 x 47.5. RM.

12. Portrait of Ivan Turgenev. 1874. 116.5 x 89. TG

13. A Beggar -girl. Veules. 1874. 74 x 50. Art Museum, Irkutsk.

14. A Horse for Transporting Stones. Veules. 1874. 28 x 44. The

Radishchev Art Museum. Saratov.

15. Portrait of Vera Repin. 1874. 73 x 60. TG.

16. Portrait of Vera Repin. 1875. 59 x 49. RM

17. A Negro Woman. End of 1875 -beginning 1876. 115 x 93. RM.

18. Sadko in the Underwater Kingdom. 1876, 322.5 x 230. RM.

19. Jew at Prayer. 1875. 80 x 64.5. TG.

20. On a Turf Seat. 1876. 36 x 55.5. RM.

Page 5: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

V

21. Girl with a Bunch of Flowers. Vera Repin. 1878. 62.5 x 48.5. The Brodsky Memorial Museum, Leningrad.

22. V.I. Surikov. The Morning of the Execution of the Streltsy. 1881. 218 x 379. TG.

23. Tsarevna Sofya in the New Maiden Convent at the Time of the Execution of the Streltsy and the Torture of All Her Servants in 1698. 1879. 201.8 x 145.3. TG.

24. Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan. 16 November 1581. 1885.

199.5 x 254. TG.

25. V. G. Shvarts. Ivan the Terrible Beside the Body of His Son. 1864.

71 x 89. TG.

26. V. M. Vasnetsov. Tsar Ivan the Terrible. 1897. 247 x 132. TO.

27. Zaporozhye Cossacks Writing a Mocking Letter to the Turkish Sultan. 1880 -1891. 203 x 358. RM.

28. Zaporozhye Cossacks. Sketch for Zaporozhye Cossacks Writing a Mocking Letter to the Turkish Sultan. 1878. Graphite and shading. 20.2 x 29.8. TG.

29. A Cossack (Vasily Tarnovsky), 1880. Graphite and shading. 33 x 24.

TG.

30. V.G. Perov. Fomushka -sych. 1868. 44.8 x 36.8. TG.

31. Barge -haulers on the Volga. 1870 -1873. 131.5 x 281. RM.

32. Barge -haulers Crossing a Ford. 1872. 62 x 97. TG.

33. G.G. Myasoyedov. The Zemstvo Dines. 1872. 74 x 125. TG.

34. He Returned. 1877. 69.2 x 89.4. Estonian Art Museum, Tallinn.

35. In a Volost Administration Office. 1877. 47.5 x 80. RM.

36. A Peasant with an Evil Eye. 1877. 60 x 49. TG.

37. A Cautious One. 1877. 64.5 x 53. Art Museum, Gorky.

38. I. N. Kramskoy. Woodsman. 1874. 84 x 62. TG.

39. The Archdeacon. 1877. 124 x 96. TG.

40. Examination in a Village School. 1877 -1878. Private Collection,

Sweden,

41. On a Park Bridge. 1879. 38 x 61. Zilbershtein Collection, Moscow.

42. Seeing Off a Recruit. 1879. 143 x 225. RM.

43, Going Home. A Hero of the Last War. 1878. 50.8 x 34.2. TG.

44. Vechornitsy. 1881. 116 x 186. TG.

45. Religious Procession. 1877 (wrongly dated 1876). 37 x 70. RM.

46. Religious Procession in an Oak Forest. 1877 -1924? 178 x 285.

County Gallery of Arts, Náchod, Czechoslovakia.

Page 6: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

vi

47. Religious Procession in the Province of Kursk. 1880 -1883. 175 x 280. TG.

4-8. A Seamstress. 1882. Pencil. 32.5 x 23.3. TG.

49. S. V. Ivanov. Death of a Migrant Peasant. 1889, 71 x 122. TG.

50. Starving. Boy with a Piece of Bread. 1908. Pencil, charcoal and sanguine. TG.

51. The Drunken Father. 1888. Pencil. 27,2 x 35. 7, RM.

52. The Drunken Kiryak. Illustration to Chekhov's story Peasants. 1899. Pen, ink and watercolour. 25.2 x 34. Chekhov Museum, Taganrog.

53. Under the Guard. Along the Muddy Road. 1876. 26.5 x 53. TG.

54. Arrest of a Propagandist. 1880 -1892. Oil on wood. 34,8 x 546. TG,

55. A Secret Meeting. 1883. 104 x 173. TG.

56. The Annual Meeting in Memory of the French Communards at the Père- Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. 1883. 36.8 x 59.8, TG.

57. They Did Not Expect Her. 1883; 1898. Oil on wood. 44,5 x 37. TG.

58. They Did Not Expect Him. 1884; 1888, 160.5 x 167. 5, TG.

59. N. A. Yaroshenko. Kursistka. 1883. 134 x 83. Museum of Russian Art,

Kiev.

60. Spurning Confession. 1879 -1885. 48 x 59. TO.

61. Revolutionary Woman Awaiting Execution. c. 1884. National Gallery,

Prague.

62. V. E. Makovsky. Sentenced. 1879. 76.5 x 113. RM,

63. S. V. Ivanov. Etape. One Did Not Survive. 1892.

64. Alexander III Receives the District Headmen in the Courtyard of

the Petrovsky Palace in Moscow. 1886. 293 x 490. TO.

65. The Wedding of Tsar Nicholas II and Princess Alix of Hesse

(Alexandra Fedorovna). 1894. 98.5 x 128.5. RM.

66. Formal Session of the State Council in Honour of Its Centenary on

May 7, 1901. 1903. 400 x 877. RM.

67. Portrait of the Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod, K.P.

Pobedonostsev. Study for Formal Session of the State Council in

Honour of Its Centenary on May 7, 1901. 1903. 68.5 x 53. RM.

68. V. A. Serov. Soldiers, Brave Fellows, Where Now is Your Glory?

1905. Tempera and charcoal on cardboard. 47.5 x 71.5. RM.

69. S. V. Ivanov. Massacre. 1905, 70 x 80. The USSR Museum of the

Revolution, Moscow.

70. V. E. Makovsky. 9 January 1905 on Vasilevsky Island. 1905.

71. The Manifestation on 17th October 1905. 1907 -1911. 184 x 323. RM.

Page 7: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

vii

72. Portrait of A.F. Kerensky. 1917. Oil on linoleum. 115 x 84.4, Private Collection,

73. V.G. Perov. Portrait of F. M. Dostoyevsky. 1872. 99 x 80.5. TG.

74. Portrait of M.P. Musorgsky. 1881. 69 x 57. TG.

75. Portrait of A. T. Pisemsky. 1880. 87 x 68. TG.

76. Portrait of V. V. Stasov. 1883. 74 x 60. RM.

77. Portrait of P.M Tretyakov, 1883. 98 x 75.8. TG.

78, Portrait of Leo Tolstoy. 1887. 124 x 88. TG.

79. Leo Tolstoy Ploughing. 1887. 27.8 x 40.3. TG.

80. Leo Tolstoy in the Forest. 1891. 60 x 50. TG.

81. Leo Tolstoy Barefoot. 1901. 207 x 73. RM.

82, Tolstoy in the Pink Armchair. 1909. 106 x 90. TG.

83. Portrait of the story -teller V. P. Shchegolyonkov. 1879. 102 x 80.

RM.

84. Portrait of Mitrofan Belyaev. 1886, 125 x 89. RM.

85. Portrait of V. D, Spasovich. 1891. 93.5 x 76. RM.

86. Portrait of Countess Louise Mercy d'Argenteau. 1890. 85.4 x 108.

TG,

87. Portrait of Pelageya Strepetova as Lizaveta in Pisemsky's play Hard Lot. 1881. 112 x 84. TG.

88. Vera Repin Resting. 1882. 140 x 91.5. TG.

89. Portrait of Yury Repin. 1882, 110.4 x 55.5. TG.

90. Portrait of Nadya Repin. 1881. 66 x 54. The Radishchev Art

Gallery, Saratov.

91. A Lively Girl. Vera Repin. 1884. 111 x 84.4. TG.

92. Autumn Bouquet. Portrait of Vera Repin. 1892. 111 x 65. TG.

93. In the Sunlight. Portrait of Nadya Repin. 1900. 94.3 x 67. TG.

94. Portrait of Sophya Dragomirova. 1889. 98.5 x 78.5. RM.

95. Portrait of Natalya Golovina. 1896. 90 x 59. RM.

96. Portrait of Varvara Ikskul von Hildenbandt. 1889. 196 x 71. TG.

97. Portrait of Eleonora Duse. 1891. Charcoal on canvas. 108 x 139.

TG.

98. Portrait of 85.2 x 67. House) of

99. The Surgeon cardboard.

Sophya Stakhovich. 1891. Black wash and added white.

5. Institute of Russian Literature (The Pushkin

the USSR Academy of Sciences.

E. Pavlov in the Operating Theatre. 1889. Oil on

27.8 x 40.3. TG.

Page 8: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

viii

100. St. Nicholas of Myra Delivers the Three Innocent Men. 1888. 215 x 196. RM.

101. The Duel. 1896. 52 x 103. TG.

102. A Byelorussian. 1892. 102 x 71.5. RM.

103. Country House of the Academy of Arts. 1898. 64. x 106. RM.

104. Wide World. 1903. 179 x 284.5. RM.

105. Job and His Friends. 1869. 133 x 199. RM.

106. Christ Raising Jairus's Daughter from the Dead. 1871. 229 x 382.

RM.

107. I. N. Kramskoy. Christ in the Wilderness. 1872, 180 x 210. TG.

108. The Morning of the Resurrection. 1922. c. 200 x 140. The Repin Museum, Penaty,

109. Golgotha. 1922. 214 x 176. Oil on linoleum. The Art Museum, Princeton University.

110. Alexander Pushkin on the Lyceum Speech -day, 8 January 1815. 1911.

123 x 195. The All -Union Pushkin Museum, Leningrad.

111. Gaidamak. 1902. 125 x 95. State Museum of Fine Art, Turkmenistan

SSR

112. Cossacks from the Black Sea Coast. 1908 -1909. Private Collection,

Sweden. On loan to the Naval Museum, Stockholm.

113. Gopak. 1927. c. 170 x 200. Private Collection, Sweden. On loan to

the Ivar Kreuger Museum, Kalmar, Sweden.

114. Portrait of Vladimir Bekhterev. 1913. 107 x 78. RM.

115. Portrait of Akseli Gallen Kal l el a. 1920. 100 x 81. The Ateneum,

Helsinki.

Page 9: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

1. V.G. Perov. The Village Easter Procession. 1861. TG.

2. V.I. Yakobi. Prisoners' Malt. 1861. TG.

Page 10: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

3.YY P

ukirev. The Unequal Marriage. 1fS62. TG.

4 iortraiL

o.f AriyuLa T'otrovna. M1,4.

'Plie ltepin Museum,

Penaty.

Page 11: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

5. Portrait of Vera Shevtsova. 1869. RM.

6. Reading for an Examination. 1864. RM.

Page 12: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

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Page 13: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

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9. Title page to Musorgsky's Detskaya. 1872.

Page 14: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

10. A Parisian Café. 1875. Collection of M. Mansson.

11. A Man and a Woman at the Table. Two Women Seated. A Man Pulling

on a Glove. Study for A Parisian Café. 1873. RM.

Page 15: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

12.

Port

rait

of I

van

Turgenev. 1874. TG.

13. A Beggar -girl. Veules. 1874.

Art

Mus

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, Ir

kuts

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Page 16: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

4. A Horse for Transporting Stones. Veules. 1874. The Radishehev Art

Auseum, Saratov.

5. Portrait of Vera Repin. 1874. TG.

Page 17: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

16. Portrait of Vera Repin. 1875.

RIVE.

17. A Negro Woman. End of 1875- beginning 1876. RN'.

Page 18: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

18. Sadko in the Underwater Kingdom. 1876. RM.

19. Jew at Frayer. 1875. TG.

Page 19: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

20. On a Turf Seat. 1876. RM.

21. Girl with a Bunch of Flowers. Vera Repin. 1878.

The Brodsky Memorial Museum, Leningrad.

Page 20: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

22. V.I. Surikov. The Morning of the Execution of the Streltsy. 1881. TG.

23. Tsarevna Sofya in the New I aiden Convent at the time of the Execution of the Streltsy and the Torture of All Her Servants in 1698. 1879. TG.

Page 21: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

24. Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan. 16 November 1581. 1885. TG.

Page 22: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

25. V.G. Shvarts. Ivan the Terrible Beside the Body of His Son.

1864. TG.

26. V.M. Vasnetsov. Tsar Ivan the Terrible. 1897. TG.

Page 23: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

27. Zaporozhye Cossacks Writing a Mocking Letter to the Turkish Sultan.

1ß8o

-1891. RM.

Page 24: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

28. Zaporozhye Cossacks. Sketch for Zaporozhye Cossacks s,riting a

Mocking Letter to the Turkish Sultan. 1878. TG.

29. A Cossack (Vasily Tarnovsky). 1880. `íG.

Page 25: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

30. V.G. Peron. Fomushka -sych. 1868. TG.

32. Barge- haulers Crossing a Ford. 1872. TG.

Page 26: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

31.

Bar

ge-h

aule

rs

on th

e V

olga

. 18

70-1

873.

I0.

Page 27: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

33. G.G. Lyasoyedov. The Zemtsvo Dines. 1872. TG.

34. 11e Returned. 1877. Estonian Art Luseum, Tallinn.

Page 28: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

35. In a Volost Administration Office. 1877. RL.

36. A Peasant with an Evil Eye. 1877. TG.

Page 29: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

37. A Cautious One. 1877. Art Museum, Gorky.

38. I.N. Kramskoy. Woodsman. 1874. TG.

Page 30: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

39. The Archdeacon. 1877. TG.

40. Examination in a Village School. 1877 -1878. Private Collection, Sweden.

Page 31: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

41. On a Park Bridge. 1879. Zilbershtein Collection, Moscow.

42. Seeing Off a Recruit. 1879. RM.

Page 32: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

E-I

Page 33: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

45. Religious Procession. 1877 (wrongly dated 1876). RM.

46. Religious Procession in an Oak Forest. 1877 -1924? County Gallery of Arts, Náchod, Czechoslovakia.

Page 34: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

47. Religious Procession in the Province of Kursk. 1880 -1883. TG.

Page 35: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

48. A Seamstress. 1882. TG.

49. S.T. Ivanov. Death of a Migrant Peasant. 1889. TG.

Page 36: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

50. Starving. Boy with a Piece of Bread. 1908. TG.

51. The Drunken Father. 1888. RM.

Page 37: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

52. The Drunken Kiryak. Illustration to Chekhov's story

Peasants. 1899. Chekhov Museum, Taganrog.

53. Under the Guard. Along the Muddy Road. 1876. TG.

Page 38: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

ir Ln in

Page 39: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

56. The Annual Meeting in Memory of the French Communards at the

Pére- Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. 1883. TG.

57. They Did Not Expect her. 1883; 1898. TG.

Page 40: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

58. They Did Not Expect Him. 1884; 1888. TG.

Page 41: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

59. N.A. Yaroshenko. Kursistka. 1883.

60. purning Confession. 1679 -1885. TG.

Museum of Russian Art, Kiev.

Page 42: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

61. Revolutionary Woman Awaiting Execution. c.1884.

National Gallery, Prague.

62. V.E. Makovsky. Sentenced. 1879. RM.

Page 43: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

63. S.V. Ivanov. Etape. One Did Not Survive. 1892.

65. The Wedding of Tsar Nicholas II and Princess Alix of Hesse

(Alexandra Fedorovna) . 1894. RM.

Page 44: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

111M

anm

ilise

m."

-

64. Alexander III Receives the District Headmen in the Courtyard of the

Petrovsky Palace in Moscow. 1886. TG.

Page 45: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

66.

Form

al

Sess

ion

of t

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Page 46: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

67. Portrait of the Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod, K.P. Pobedonostsev. Study for State Council. 1903. k`.

68. V.A. Serov. Soldiers, Brave Fellows, Where Now is Your Glory? 1905. RPM

Page 47: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

69. S.V. Ivanov. Massacre. 1905. The USSR Museum of the

Revolution. Moscow.

70. V.E. Makovaky. 9 Janual-7 1905 on Vasilevsky Island. 1905.

Page 48: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

71. The Lanifestation on 17th October 1905. 1907 -1911. RT:.

72. Portrait of A.F. Kerensky. 1917. Private Collection.

Page 49: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

73. V.G. Perov. Portrait of F.M. Dostoyevsky. 1872. TG.

74. Portrait of M.P. Musorgsky. 1881. TG.

Page 50: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

75. Portrait of A.T. Fisemsky. 1880. TO.

76. iortrait of V.V. Stasov. 1883. RM.

Page 51: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

77. Portrait of P.M. Tretyakov. 1883. TG.

78. Portrait of Leo Tolstoy. 1887. TG.

Page 52: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

79. Leo Tolstoy Ploughing. 1887. TG.

80. Leo Tolstoy in the Forest. 1891. `1G.

Page 53: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

81. Leo Tolstoy Barefoot. 1901. RI4'I.

82. Tolstoy in the Pink Armchair. 1909. TG.

Page 54: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

83. Portrait of the story- teller V.P. Shchegolyonkov.

84. Portrait of Mitrofan Belyaev. 1886. RM.

1879. RM.

Page 55: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

85. Portrait of V.D. Spasovich. 1891. RM.

86. Portrait of Countess Louise hercy d'Argenteau. 1890. `1'G.

Page 56: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

.87. Portrait of Pelage.ya Strepetova as Lizaveta

in Pisemsky's _play Eard Lot. 1881. Tg.

88. Vera Repin Resting. 1882. TG.

Page 57: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

89. Portrait of Yury Repin. 1882. TG.

90. Portrait of Nadya Repin. 1881. The Radishchev

Art Gallery, Saratov.

Page 58: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

91. A Lively Girl. Vera Repin. 1884. TG.

92. Autumn Bouquet. Portrait of Vera Repin.

1892. TG.

Page 59: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

93. In the Sunlight. Portrait of ;'adya tiepin.

1900. TG.

94. Portrait of Sophya Dragomirova. 1889. HM.

Page 60: IDEOLOGY AND AESTHETICS IN RUSSIAN ART

95. Portrait of Natalya Golovina. 1896.

H.T.R.

96. Portrait of Varvara Ikskul von

Hildenbandt. 1889. TG.

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97. Portrait of Eleonora Duse. 1891

98. Portrait of Sophya Stakhovich. Literature (The Pushkin House) Sciences.

. TG.

1891. Institute of Russian of the USSR Academy of

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99. The Surgeon E. Pavlov in the Operating Theatre. 1889. TG.

100. St. Nicholas of Yyra Delivers Three Innocent bien. 1888. Plut.

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101. The Duel. 1896. TG.

102. A Byelorussian. 1892. RM.

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103. Country House of the Academy cf Arts. 1898. HJvi.

104. Wide World. 1903. RN_.

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105. Job and His Friends. 1869. RM.

106. Christ Raising Jairnsts Daughter from the Dead. 1871. RM.

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107. I.N. Kramskoy. Christ in the Wilderness. 1872. TG.

108. The Yorning of the Resurrection. 1922. The Repin Museum, P enaty .

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109. Golgotha. 1922. The Art Museum, Princeton University.

110. Alexander Pushkin on the Lyceum Speech -day, 8 January 1815. 1911. The All -Union Pushkin T :useum, Leningrad.

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111. Gaidamak. 1902. State Museum of Fine Art,

Turkmenistan SSR.

112. Cossacks from the Black Sea Coast. 1908 -1909.

Private Collection, Sweden. en loan to the

Naval Museum, Stockholm.

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113. Gopak. 1927. Private Ivar Kreuger Museum,

114. Portrait of Vladimir

Collection, Sweden. On loan to the Kalmar, Sweden.

Bekhterev. 1913. RM.

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115. Portrait of Akseli Gallen- Rallela. 1920. The Ateneum, Helsinki.