Russian portrait artists and their works. The most famous paintings by Russian artists Looking at paintings by famous artists

Looking at the unusually beautiful monumental canvases, the viewer understands that in any work of a great artist the secret of life, tragic stories, and deep experiences are hidden. Only by immersing yourself and coming into contact with a small episode of a talented person can you try to predict an era that is far in the past. Who are these Russian masters of painting and what does modern man know about them?

10 Mikhail Alexandrovich Vrubel (1856 – 1910)

The face of a mysterious creature that I dreamed about at night became prophetic. Mihali was obsessed and wanted to finish the portrait as quickly as possible. At this time, the young man meets Nadezhda Zabela, who becomes his wife. A son born with a harelip was a sign for Vrubel. The artist stops noticing everyone and works hard on “The Demon.” The tragic events broke the master’s nervous system and he was placed in a mental hospital. Thus, clarification coexisted with insanity, and recognition with damnation.

9 Ivan Nikolaevich Kramskoy (1837 – 1887)


The famous painting “The Stranger” was associated with many women of that time. To Anna Karenina, Empress Maria Feodorovna, peasant woman Matryona Savvishna. But the final prototype was never determined. The work “Mermaid”, acquired by Tretyakov, was of a mystical nature. At night, a cold air blew from the hall where the canvas hung, and some sounds were heard. The man, having been near the painting, felt tired and sleepy. The famous masterpiece was moved to a dark corner, and the complaints stopped.

8 Alexey Kondratievich Savrasov (1830 – 1897)


Even as a child, Alexey loved to create small sketches, which were happily bought up by local residents. The young man was going to enter art school, but due to the death of his mother, his studies had to be postponed. The father did not approve of drawing and sent his son to live in the attic, where the wind blew from all the cracks. The young talent was saved by the Chief of Police. At the age of 24, Savrasov was awarded the title of academician. He is called "the artist of one picture." The work “The Rooks Have Arrived” talks about boundless love for his native land.

7 Ilya Efimovich Repin (1844 – 1930)


The artist’s canvases are a real separate world, telling about experience, pain, joy and compassion. A modern viewer, looking at the master’s paintings, begins to think about the sincerity and kindness that is so lacking in life. The work “Ivan the Terrible and Son” affected the artist’s health. Some considered it a curse for false facts. His right hand stopped working and subsequently he wrote with his left. “Barge Haulers on the Volga”, “They Didn’t Expect”, “Cossacks” and many other paintings are a wonderful legacy for descendants.

6 Karl Pavlovich Bryullov (1799 – 1852)


Karl graduated from the Academy of Arts with a gold medal and was awarded a trip to Rome as a reward for his hard work. After the trip, the artist begins work on the famous painting “The Death of Pompeii.” Bryullov's paintings are very popular. The master is busy with work, paints portraits of famous people, and paints churches. His paintings will forever remain the property of the people - “Horsewoman”, “Italian Morning” and others.

5 Viktor Mikhailovich Vasnetsov (1848 – 1926)


The great Russian artist-painter was called a “true hero.” Born into a priest's family, his future was predictable. At the theological seminary, the young man is interested in drawing and in his last year he decides to make drastic changes. Having successfully passed the exams, Victor, by an absurd accident, does not dare to hear the verdict and leaves, only to return a year later and try his hand. When the unsure Vasnetsov returns to the Academy to undergo a re-test, the future artist learns that he has already been a student at the famous educational institution for a year. Everyone knows the master’s paintings – “Alyonushka”, “Bogatyrs”, “Ivan Tsarevich on the Gray Wolf” and others.

4 Vasily Ivanovich Surikov (1848 – 1916)


The hereditary Cossack was called a “composer” among his friends for his ability to construct a composition and choose rich colors. Vasily graduated from the Academy with a gold medal. Immediately after studying, the artist began painting “The Morning of the Streltsy Execution.” It created a real sensation, and Tretyakov purchased it right at the exhibition. The following paintings - “Menshikov in Berezovo” and “Boyaryna Morozova” also moved to Tretyakov’s mansion. The master saw the past perfectly, as if he had been in it. Historical masterpieces still captivate the viewer - “The Conquest of Siberia by Ermak”, “Suvorov’s Crossing of the Alps” and others.

3 Valentin Aleksandrovich Serov (1865 – 1911)


Artistic talent was evident already in childhood. The boy was constantly drawing. Teachers complained about his lack of composure, took away his notebooks with drawings, and put them in a corner. But the portrait of a gymnasium teacher brought recognition. The adults were surprised at the skill and replaced their anger with admiration. A serious and purposeful young man painted portraits and embodied his soul in them. “Girl with Peaches”, “Portrait of Princess Olga”, “Portrait of Emperor Nicholas” and many other works are the legacy of the great portrait painter.

2 Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky (1817 – 1900)


Seascapes glorified the talented artist. Armenian by origin, at heart he was a real Russian man. Many people wonder why the sea was the main subject of the paintings? Perhaps these are childhood memories, where contact with the greatness of the water surface became the brightest inspiration. In addition to drawing, Ivan played the violin beautifully and the composer preserved the Tatar motifs heard by Glinka in the opera “Ruslan and Lyudmila”. Let's remember the most famous paintings - “The Ninth Wave”, “The Black Sea”, “The Battle of Chechmen”, “Chaos in the Vatican”.

1 Ivan Ivanovich Shishkin (1832 – 1898)


The famous Russian landscape painter came from a merchant family and did not experience financial difficulties. Fame came to him quite early. When Ivan graduated from the Academy of Arts, his name was known abroad. Personal life was not going well. The first marriage ended tragically. My wife died, and then my little son. But the second marriage also brought difficult trials. His wife died, leaving the artist with two daughters. A master at work died at the age of 66. The legacy received great works as a gift - “Morning in a Pine Forest”, “Rye”, “Pine Forest”, “In the Wild North” and other paintings.

The fates of talented artists whose paintings are known throughout the world turned out differently. But all of them, of course, accomplished a great feat in their lives, leaving in the paintings their own visions of a natural phenomenon, a historical event, and a human image. Let one of them be considered not a sufficiently correct and perfect person. However, the contribution of the masters is not commensurate with stupid statements.

The mysterious world of art may seem confusing to the untrained eye, but there are masterpieces that everyone should know. Talent, inspiration and painstaking work on every stroke give birth to works that are admired centuries later.

It is impossible to collect all the outstanding creations in one selection, but we tried to select the most famous paintings that attract giant queues in front of museums around the world.

The most famous paintings by Russian artists

“Morning in a pine forest”, Ivan Shishkin and Konstantin Savitsky

Year of creation: 1889
Museum


Shishkin was an excellent landscape painter, but he rarely had to draw animals, so the figures of bear cubs were painted by Savitsky, an excellent animal artist. At the end of the work, Tretyakov ordered Savitsky’s signature to be erased, considering that Shishkin had done much more extensive work.

“Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan November 16, 1581”, Ilya Repin

Years of creation: 1883–1885
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


Repin was inspired to create the masterpiece, better known as “Ivan the Terrible Kills His Son,” by Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Antar” symphony, namely its second movement, “The Sweetness of Revenge.” Under the influence of the sounds of music, the artist depicted a bloody scene of murder and subsequent repentance observed in the eyes of the sovereign.

"The Seated Demon", Mikhail Vrubel

Year of creation: 1890
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


The painting was one of thirty illustrations drawn by Vrubel for the anniversary edition of the works of M.Yu. Lermontov. “The sitting demon” personifies the doubts inherent in the human spirit, the subtle, elusive “mood of the soul.” According to experts, the artist was to some extent obsessed with the image of a demon: this painting was followed by “The Flying Demon” and “The Defeated Demon.”

“Boyaryna Morozova”, Vasily Surikov

Years of creation: 1884–1887
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


The film is based on the plot of the Old Believer life “The Tale of Boyarina Morozova”. The understanding of the key image came to the artist when he saw a crow spreading its black wings like a blur on the snowy surface. Later, Surikov spent a long time looking for a prototype for the noblewoman’s face, but could not find anything suitable until one day he met an Old Believer woman with a pale, frantic face in a cemetery. The portrait sketch was completed in two hours.

"Bogatyrs", Viktor Vasnetsov

Years of creation: 1881–1898
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


The future epic masterpiece was born as a small pencil sketch in 1881; For further work on the canvas, Vasnetsov spent many years painstakingly collecting information about the heroes from myths, legends and traditions, and also studied authentic ancient Russian ammunition in museums.

Analysis of Vasnetsov’s painting “Three Heroes”

“Bathing the Red Horse”, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin

Year of creation: 1912
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


Initially, the painting was conceived as an everyday sketch from the life of a Russian village, but during the work the artist’s canvas became overgrown with a huge number of symbols. By the red horse, Petrov-Vodkin meant “The Fate of Russia”; after the country entered the First World War, he exclaimed: “So that’s why I painted this picture!” However, after the revolution, pro-Soviet art critics interpreted the key figure in the painting as a “harbinger of revolutionary fires.”

"Trinity", Andrei Rublev

Year of creation: 1411
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


The icon that laid the foundation for the tradition of Russian icon painting in the 15th–16th centuries. The canvas depicting the Old Testament trinity of angels who appeared to Abraham is a symbol of the unity of the Holy Trinity.

"The Ninth Wave", Ivan Aivazovsky

Year of creation: 1850
Museum


A pearl in the “cartography” of the legendary Russian marine painter, who without hesitation can be considered one of the most famous artists in the world. We can see how the sailors who miraculously survived the storm cling to the mast in anticipation of meeting the “ninth wave,” the mythical apogee of all storms. But the warm shades dominating the canvas give hope for the salvation of the victims.

“The Last Day of Pompeii”, Karl Bryullov

Years of creation: 1830–1833
Museum: Russian Museum, St. Petersburg


Completed in 1833, Bryullov’s painting was initially exhibited in the largest cities of Italy, where it caused a real sensation - the painter was compared to Michelangelo, Titian, Raphael... At home, the masterpiece was greeted with no less enthusiasm, securing the nickname “Charlemagne” for Bryullov. The canvas is truly great: its dimensions are 4.6 by 6.5 meters, which makes it one of the largest paintings among the creations of Russian artists.

The most famous paintings of Leonardo da Vinci

"Mona Lisa"

Years of creation: 1503–1505
Museum: Louvre, Paris


A masterpiece of the Florentine genius that needs no introduction. It is noteworthy that the painting received cult status after the incident of theft from the Louvre in 1911. Two years later, the thief, who turned out to be a museum employee, tried to sell the painting to the Uffizi Gallery. The events of the high-profile case were covered in detail in the world press, after which hundreds of thousands of reproductions went on sale, and the mysterious Mona Lisa became an object of worship.

Years of creation: 1495–1498
Museum: Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan


After five centuries, a fresco with a classical plot on the wall of the refectory of the Dominican monastery in Milan is recognized as one of the most mysterious paintings in history. According to Da Vinci's idea, the painting depicts the moment of the Easter meal, when Christ notifies the disciples of imminent betrayal. The huge number of hidden symbols has given rise to an equally huge number of studies, allusions, borrowings and parodies.

"Madonna Litta"

Year of creation: 1491
Museum: Hermitage, St. Petersburg


Also known as the Madonna and Child, the painting was kept in the collection of the Dukes of Litta for a long time, and in 1864 it was purchased by the St. Petersburg Hermitage. Many experts agree that the figure of the baby was painted not by da Vinci personally, but by one of his students - a pose too uncharacteristic for the painter.

The most famous paintings of Salvador Dali

Year of creation: 1931
Museum: Museum of Modern Art, New York


Paradoxically, the most famous work of the genius of surrealism was born from thoughts about Camembert cheese. One evening, after a friendly dinner that ended with cheese appetizers, the artist was lost in thought about “spreading pulp,” and his imagination painted a picture of a melting clock with an olive branch in the foreground.

Year of creation: 1955
Museum: National Gallery of Art, Washington


A traditional plot given a surreal twist using arithmetic principles studied by Leonardo da Vinci. The artist put the peculiar magic of the number “12” at the forefront, moving away from the hermeneutic method of interpreting the biblical plot.

The most famous paintings of Pablo Picasso

Year of creation: 1905
Museum: Pushkin Museum, Moscow


The painting became the first sign of the so-called “pink” period in Picasso’s work. Rough texture and simplified style are combined with a sensitive play of lines and colors, the contrast between the massive figure of an athlete and a fragile gymnast. The canvas was sold along with 29 other works for 2 thousand francs (in total) to the Parisian collector Vollard, changed several collections, and in 1913 it was acquired by the Russian philanthropist Ivan Morozov, already for 13 thousand francs.

Year of creation: 1937
Museum: Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid


Guernica is the name of a city in the Basque country that was subjected to German bombing in April 1937. Picasso had never been to Guernica, but was stunned by the scale of the disaster, as if by a “blow from a bull’s horn.” The artist conveyed the horrors of war in abstract form and showed the real face of fascism, veiling it with bizarre geometric shapes.

The most famous paintings of the Renaissance

"Sistine Madonna", Raphael Santi

Years of creation: 1512–1513
Museum: Gallery of Old Masters, Dresden


If you look closely at the background, which at first glance consists of clouds, you will notice that in fact Raphael depicted the heads of angels there. The two angels located at the bottom of the picture are almost more famous than the masterpiece itself, due to its wide circulation in mass art.

"Birth of Venus", Sandro Botticelli

Year of creation: 1486
Museum: Uffizi Gallery, Florence


The picture is based on the ancient Greek myth of the birth of Aphrodite from sea foam. Unlike many masterpieces of the Renaissance, the canvas has survived to this day in excellent condition thanks to the protective layer of egg yolk that Botticelli prudently covered the work with.

"The Creation of Adam", Michelangelo Buonarotti

Year of creation: 1511
Museum: Sistine Chapel, Vatican


One of nine frescoes on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, illustrating the chapter from Genesis: “And God created man in His own image.” It was Michelangelo who was the first to depict God as a wise, gray-haired old man, after which this image became archetypal. Modern scientists believe that the contours of the figure of God and angels represent the human brain.

"Night Watch", Rembrandt

Year of creation: 1642
Museum: Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam


The full title of the painting is “Performance of the rifle company of Captain Frans Banning Kok and Lieutenant Willem van Ruytenburg.” The painting received its modern name in the 19th century, when it was found by art critics who, due to the layer of dirt covering the work, decided that the action in the painting was taking place under the cover of the darkness of night.

"The Garden of Earthly Delights", Hieronymus Bosch

Years of creation: 1500–1510
Museum: Prado Museum, Madrid


Perhaps the most famous triptych by Bosch, named after the central part of the composition: the figures depicted on it selflessly indulge in the sin of voluptuousness. In contrast to the middle part, which is full of small, “hectic” details, the left wing of the picture, depicting genuine paradise, conveys an atmosphere of peace and tranquility, and the right wing, full of devilish mechanisms, on the contrary, recalls the torments of hell.

The most famous paintings of the 20th century

"Black Square", Kazimir Malevich

Year of creation: 1915
Museum: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


Malevich wrote “Black Square” for several months; Legend has it that a painting is hidden under a layer of black paint - the artist did not have time to finish the work on time and, in a fit of anger, covered up the image. There are at least seven copies of the “Black Square” made by Malevich, as well as a kind of “continuation” of the Suprematist squares – “Red Square” (1915) and “White Square” (1918).

"The Scream", Edvard Munch

Year of creation: 1893
Museum: National Gallery, Oslo


Due to its inexplicable mystical effect on the viewer, the painting was stolen in 1994 and 2004. There is an opinion that the picture created at the turn of the 20th century anticipated numerous disasters of the coming century. The deep symbolism of "The Scream" has inspired many artists, including Andy Warhol, directors, musicians and even animators.

"Walk", Marc Chagall

Year of creation: 1918
Museum: Russian Museum, St. Petersburg


If you were also tormented by the question: “Why are the people in Marc Chagall’s painting soaring in the air?”, here is the answer from the artist himself - the force that can give a person the opportunity to fly is nothing other than love. It is believed that the man and woman on the canvas are Marc Chagall and his wife.

"No. 5, 1948", Jackson Pollock

Year of creation: 1948
Museum: Private collection, New York


This painting still causes a lot of controversy. Some art critics believe that the excitement around the painting, painted using the signature splashing technique, was created artificially. The canvas was not sold until all the artist’s other works were purchased, and accordingly, the price for a non-figurative masterpiece skyrocketed. “Number Five” was sold for $140 million, becoming the most expensive painting in history.

"Marilyn Diptych", Andy Warhol

Year of creation: 1962
Museum: Tate Gallery, London


A week after the death of Marilyn Monroe, the controversial artist began work on the canvas. 50 stenciled portraits of the actress were applied to the canvas, stylized in the “pop art” genre based on a photograph from 1953.
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04/20/2017 at 22:25 · Pavlofox · 3 120

The most famous paintings by Russian artists

Art has been considered one of the most valuable assets of human culture for several centuries. Paintings by famous artists become state treasures, closely watched by thousands of specialists, and they cost hundreds of millions of dollars. In our country, art is valued much less, but everyone is probably familiar with the following the most famous paintings by Russian artists. Any educated person is sure to know about them.

10. The appearance of Christ to the people | Alexander Ivanov

"The Appearance of Christ to the People" worthily opens the top of the most famous paintings by Russian artists. Russian artist Alexander Ivanov became famous for his painting “The Appearance of Christ to the People,” which he painted for twenty years. The size of the painting is amazing, as is its detail. The author, of course, was inspired by scenes from the Bible, and it was not the artist’s first work on religious themes - Ivanov knew what everyone liked in the first picture and implemented it again - for the last time. Contemporaries called the picture not just stunning, but the most important event in their lives. Ironically, Ivanov himself died on the same day, and the Tsar bought the painting immediately after the author’s death.

9. Unequal marriage | Vasily Pukirev


One of the most famous paintings by Russian artists is considered to be an incredibly deep canvas by Vasily Pukirev. Pukirev is an unremarkable villager who became famous for only one painting - all the author’s other works remained forgotten. Why “Unequal Marriage”? The picture describes a plot from the life of Pukirev himself - he is even depicted in the picture itself. Young Pukirev stands in the background with his arms crossed, unable to do anything, because his bride is marrying an old general. Kostomarov himself, having seen the painting, took a young girl as his wife.

8. The rooks have arrived | Alexey Savrasov


"The Rooks Have Arrived"- the most famous painting by Russian artist Alexei Savrasov. The painting gained popularity even during its first exhibition, where its realism and sincerity were appreciated. “Such landscapes can only be found in Rooks,” they said about Savrasov’s painting. Interestingly, the church that is depicted in the background exists and stands in the same form to this day. In the same village the famous Susanin accomplished his feat.

7. Hunters at rest | Vasily Perov


The author of the picture "Hunters at Rest" is the famous author Vasily Grigorievich Perov. Now everyone knows this one of the most famous paintings by Russian artists, but in the 19th century many described it as unsuccessful. There were also those who admired Perov's work. First of all, the great classic Dostoevsky admired the work. Some criticized the picture because of its unreliability, because Perov painted hunters based on his friends who were unfamiliar with this type of activity.

6. Three heroes | Victor Vasnetsov


Viktor Vasnetsov created one of the most famous paintings among Russian authors - "Three heroes". Vasnetsov said that he was inspired by the thick oak trees - he was amazed by their power, and a little later the heroes simply appeared to him in a dream. The painting depicts famous characters from Russian folk tales. In the very center is Ilya Muromets, in whose hand is a spear, on the left is Dobrynya Nikitich, drawing a sword from its scabbard, and on the right is Alyosha Popovich with a bow and arrows. It is known that the artist drew Alyosha from Mamontov’s son, on whose estate the painting hung. And the rest of the heroes are similar to members of Vasnetsov’s own family.

5. Girl with peaches | Valentin Serov


Valentin Aleksandrovich Serov, unlike previous authors, after painting "Girl with Peaches", became one of the most important artists in the empire. The painting so impressed the public and even the royal family that they turned to the author with an order for several more paintings to decorate the royal palaces. “Girl with Peaches” is deservedly included in the Top of the most famous paintings by Russian artists thanks to the joy that the girl radiates. Critics call the picture “alive.” But imagine what it was like for the girl who had to pose for Serov, and he is not the only one who embodied this young lady on his canvases.

4. Barge haulers on the Volga | Ilya Efimovich


Ilya Efimovich is a native of Ukraine; as a child he never saw large ships, barge haulers, and especially the Volga. For the first time, Efimovich saw barge haulers on the Neva, where he developed the plot for his future masterpiece. Now "Barge Haulers on the Volga" one of the most representative paintings by Russian artists, which is deservedly included in the top 10. The picture was described more than once by great literary figures, including Dostoevsky himself. To paint the painting “Barge Haulers on the Volga,” the author needed only 200 rubles for the trip. Then it was sold for only 3,000 rubles to Vladimir Alexandrovich, the Grand Duke of Russia. Now the painting is a heritage of Russian culture and its value cannot be estimated.

3. Boyarina Morozova | Vasily Surikov


"Boyaryna Morozova" Russian author Vasily Surikov is one of the most important exhibits of the Tretyakov Gallery and, concurrently, one of the most famous paintings by Russian artists. The painting is large in size, and visitors are amazed at how well detailed life is on such a large canvas. The Tretyakov Gallery purchased the painting for only 25 thousand rubles - a lot of money, of course, for the 19th century, but now its value cannot be overestimated. It is interesting that buying the painting was a risk for the gallery, because the majority did not accept the painting.

2. Stranger | Ivan Kramskoy


The second most famous painting by Russian artists is rightfully mysterious "Stranger" Ivan Kramskoy. The small canvas depicts a young woman dressed in the most expensive and fashionable clothes of the late 19th century. Some claim that the painting depicts Anna Karenina, and some even believe that “The Stranger” brings great misfortune to everyone who looks into her eyes. “Unknown” is the most famous painting of all Kramskoy’s works, and the world still does not know who the artist based the picture on. The author himself did not mention anything.

1. Morning in a pine forest | Ivan Shishkin


"Morning in a pine forest." Ivan Shishkin, an artist who answered at the academy that he would be a landscape painter, painted the famous painting “Morning in a Pine Forest.” Even small children know about the canvas, although they call it “bears”, as they are depicted on chocolates of the same name. Among Russian artists, the painting “Morning in a Pine Forest” by Shishkin is the most recognizable and often criticized for its lack of realism. The most persistent ones object to why there are three cubs, since a female bear rarely has such offspring. The painting gained popularity thanks to the fabulously beautiful forest landscape with the addition of animalism in the plot, that is, a bear family.

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Majestic and diverse Russian painting always delights viewers with its inconstancy and perfection of artistic forms. This is a feature of the works of famous art masters. They always surprised us with their extraordinary approach to work, their reverent attitude towards the feelings and sensations of each person. Perhaps this is why Russian artists so often depicted portrait compositions that vividly combined emotional images and epically calm motifs. No wonder Maxim Gorky once said that an artist is the heart of his country, the voice of an entire era. Indeed, the majestic and elegant paintings of Russian artists vividly convey the inspiration of their time. Similar to the aspirations of the famous author Anton Chekhov, many sought to bring into Russian paintings the unique flavor of their people, as well as an unquenchable dream of beauty. It is difficult to underestimate the extraordinary paintings of these masters of majestic art, because truly extraordinary works of various genres were born under their brushes. Academic painting, portrait, historical painting, landscape, works of romanticism, modernism or symbolism - all of them still bring joy and inspiration to their viewers. Everyone finds in them something more than colorful colors, graceful lines and inimitable genres of world art. Perhaps such an abundance of forms and images with which Russian painting surprises is connected with the enormous potential of the artists’ surrounding world. Levitan also said that every note of lush nature contains a majestic and extraordinary palette of colors. With such a beginning, a magnificent expanse appears for the artist’s brush. Therefore, all Russian paintings are distinguished by their exquisite severity and attractive beauty, which is so difficult to tear yourself away from.

Russian painting is rightfully distinguished from world art. The fact is that until the seventeenth century, Russian painting was associated exclusively with religious themes. The situation changed with the coming to power of the reforming tsar, Peter the Great. Thanks to his reforms, Russian masters began to engage in secular painting, and icon painting separated as a separate direction. The seventeenth century is the time of such artists as Simon Ushakov and Joseph Vladimirov. Then, in the Russian art world, portraiture arose and quickly became popular. In the eighteenth century, the first artists appeared who moved from portraiture to landscape painting. The artists’ pronounced sympathy for winter panoramas is noticeable. The eighteenth century was also remembered for the emergence of everyday painting. In the nineteenth century, three movements gained popularity in Russia: romanticism, realism and classicism. As before, Russian artists continued to turn to the portrait genre. It was then that the world-famous portraits and self-portraits of O. Kiprensky and V. Tropinin appeared. In the second half of the nineteenth century, artists increasingly depicted the common Russian people in their oppressed state. Realism becomes the central movement of painting of this period. It was then that the Itinerant artists appeared, depicting only real, real life. Well, the twentieth century is, of course, the avant-garde. The artists of that time significantly influenced both their followers in Russia and throughout the world. Their paintings became the forerunners of abstract art. Russian painting is a huge wonderful world of talented artists who have glorified Russia with their creations.

Today we present to your attention twenty paintings that are worthy of attention and recognition. These paintings were painted by famous artists, and they should be known not only by those who engage in art, but also by ordinary mortals, since art colors our lives, aesthetics deepens our view of the world. Give art its due place in your life...

1. “The Last Supper.” Leonardo Da Vinci, 1495 - 1498

Monumental painting by Leonardo da Vinci depicting the scene of Christ's last meal with his disciples. Created in 1495-1498 in the Dominican monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan.

The painting was commissioned by Leonardo from his patron, Duke Ludovico Sforza and his wife Beatrice d'Este. The lunettes above the painting, formed by a ceiling with three arches, are painted with the Sforza coat of arms. The painting began in 1495 and was completed in 1498; work proceeded intermittently. The date of the start of work is not certain, since "the archives of the monastery were destroyed, and the negligible part of the documents that we have dates back to 1497, when the painting was almost completed."

The painting became a milestone in the history of the Renaissance: the correctly reproduced depth of perspective changed the direction of the development of Western painting.

It is believed that many secrets and hints are hidden in this picture - for example, there is an assumption that the image of Jesus and Judas was copied from the same person. When Da Vinci painted the picture, in his vision Jesus personified good, while Judas was pure evil. And when the master found “his Judas” (a drunkard from the street), it turned out that, according to historians, this drunkard several years earlier served as a prototype for painting the image of Jesus. Thus, we can say that this picture captured a person at different periods of his life.

2. “Sunflowers.” Vincent Van Gogh, 1887

The title of two cycles of paintings by the Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. The first series was made in Paris in 1887. It is dedicated to lying flowers. The second series was completed a year later, in Arles. She depicts a bouquet of sunflowers in a vase. Van Gogh's friend Paul Gauguin acquired two Parisian paintings.

The artist painted sunflowers eleven times. The first four paintings were created in Paris in August - September 1887. Large cut flowers lie like some strange creatures dying before our eyes.

3. “The Ninth Wave.” Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky?, 1850.

One of the most famous paintings by the Russian marine painter Ivan Aivazovsky is kept in the Russian Museum.

The painter depicts the sea after a severe night storm and shipwrecked people. The rays of the sun illuminate the huge waves. The largest of them - the ninth shaft - is ready to fall on people trying to escape on the wreckage of the mast.

Despite the fact that the ship is destroyed and only the mast remains, the people on the mast are alive and continue to fight the elements. The warm colors of the picture make the sea not so harsh and give the viewer hope that people will be saved.

Created in 1850, the painting “The Ninth Wave” immediately became the most famous of all his marinas and was acquired by Nicholas I.

4. “Makha naked.” Francisco Goya, 1797-1800

Painting by Spanish artist Francisco Goya, painted around 1797-1800. Pairs with the painting “Maja Dressed” (La maja vestida). The paintings depict Macha, a Spanish townswoman of the 18th-19th centuries, one of the artist’s favorite subjects. "Maja Nude" is one of the earliest works of Western art to depict a fully nude woman without mythological or negative connotations.

5. “Flight of Lovers.” Marc Chagall, 1914-1918

Work on the painting “Above the City” began back in 1914, and the master applied the final touches only in 1918. During this time, Bella turned from a lover not only into an adored wife, but also the mother of their daughter Ida, forever becoming the painter’s main muse. The union of the rich daughter of a hereditary jeweler and a simple Jewish youth, whose father made a living by unloading herring, can only be called a misalliance, but love was stronger and overcame all conventions. It was this love that inspired them, lifting them to heaven.

Karina portrays Chagall’s two loves at once – Bella and Vitebsk, dear to her heart. The streets are presented in the form of houses separated by a high dark fence. The viewer will not immediately notice a goat grazing to the left of the center of the picture, and a simple man with his pants down in the foreground - humor from the painter, breaking out of the general context and romantic mood of the work, but this is all Chagall...

6. “The Face of War.” Salvador Dali, 1940.

Painting by Spanish artist Salvador Dali, painted in 1940.

The painting was created on the way to the USA. Impressed by the tragedy unfolding in the world and the bloodthirstiness of politicians, the master begins work on the ship. Located in the Boijmans-van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam.

Having lost all hope of a normal life in Europe, the artist leaves his beloved Paris for America. War covers the Old World and seeks to take over the rest of the world. The master does not yet know that his stay in the New World for eight years will make him truly famous, and his works will become masterpieces of world painting.

7. "Scream" Edvard Munch, 1893

“The Scream” (Norwegian Skrik) is a series of paintings by Norwegian expressionist artist Edvard Munch created between 1893 and 1910. They depict a human figure screaming in despair against a blood-red sky and an extremely generalized landscape background. In 1895, Munch created a lithograph on the same subject.

The red, fiery hot sky covered the cold fjord, which, in turn, gives birth to a fantastic shadow, similar to some kind of sea monster. Tension has distorted space, lines are broken, colors are inconsistent, perspective is destroyed.

Many critics believe that the plot of the picture is the fruit of the sick imagination of a mentally ill person. Some people see in the work a premonition of an environmental disaster, others decide which mummy inspired the author to create this work.

8. “The Girl with a Pearl Earring.” Jan Vermeer, 1665

The painting “Girl with a Pearl Earring” (Netherlands: “Het meisje met de parel”) was painted around 1665. Currently kept in the Mauritshuis Museum, The Hague, the Netherlands, and is the hallmark of the museum. The painting, nicknamed the Dutch Mona Lisa, or Mona Lisa of the North, is painted in the Tronie genre.

Thanks to Peter Webber’s film “Girl with a Pearl Earring” in 2003, a huge number of people far from painting learned about the wonderful Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer, as well as about his most famous painting “Girl with a Pearl Earring”.

9. "Tower of Babel." Pieter Bruegel, 1563

Famous painting by artist Pieter Bruegel. The artist created at least two paintings based on this subject.

The painting is located in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.

There is a story in the Bible about how the inhabitants of Babylon tried to build a high tower to reach heaven, but God made them speak different languages, ceased to understand each other, and the tower remained unfinished.

10. "Algerian women." Pablo Picasso, 1955

“Women of Algeria” is a series of 15 paintings created by Picasso in 1954–1955 based on the paintings of Eugene Delacroix; the paintings are distinguished by the letters assigned by the artist from A to O. “Version O” was painted on February 14, 1955; for some time it belonged to the famous American art collector of the 20th century, Victor Ganz.

Pablo Picasso's painting "Women of Algeria (Version O)" sold for $180 million.

11. "New Planet". Konstantin Yuon, 1921

Russian Soviet painter, master of landscape, theater artist, art theorist. Academician of the USSR Academy of Arts. People's Artist of the USSR. Winner of the Stalin Prize, first degree. Member of the All-Union Communist Party since 1951.

This amazing painting “New Planet”, created in 1921 and not at all typical of the realist artist Yuon, is one of the brightest works that embodied the image of the changes that became the October Revolution in the second decade of the 20th century. A new system, a new way and a new way of thinking for the newly emerging Soviet society. What awaits humanity now? Bright future? They didn’t think about it then, but the fact that Soviet Russia and the whole world was entering an era of change was obvious, as was the rapid birth of a new planet.

12. “Sistine Madonna.” Raphael Santi, 1754

A painting by Raphael, which has been in the Old Masters Gallery in Dresden since 1754. It belongs to the generally recognized peaks of the High Renaissance.

The painting, huge in size (265 × 196 cm, as the size of the painting is indicated in the Dresden Gallery catalog), was created by Raphael for the altar of the church of the monastery of St. Sixtus in Piacenza, commissioned by Pope Julius II. There is a hypothesis that the painting was painted in 1512-1513 in honor of the victory over the French who invaded Lombardy during the Italian Wars, and the subsequent inclusion of Piacenza into the Papal States.

13. “Repentant Mary Magdalene.” Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), painted around 1565

A painting painted around 1565 by the Italian artist Titian Vecellio. Belongs to the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg. Sometimes the date of creation is given as "1560s".

The model for the painting was Julia Festina, who amazed the artist with her shock of golden hair. The finished canvas greatly impressed the Duke of Gonzaga, and he decided to order a copy of it. Later, Titian, changing the background and posing of the woman, wrote a couple more similar works.

14. "Mona Lisa". Leonardo Da Vinci, 1503-1505

Portrait of Mrs. Lisa del Giocondo, (Italian. Ritratto di Monna Lisa del Giocondo) - a painting by Leonardo da Vinci, located in the Louvre (Paris, France), one of the most famous works of painting in the world, which is believed to be a portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the wife of the Florentine silk merchant Francesco del Giocondo, painted around 1503-1505 .

According to one of the put forward versions, “Mona Lisa” is a self-portrait of the artist.

15. “Morning in a pine forest”, Shishkin Ivan Ivanovich, 1889.

Painting by Russian artists Ivan Shishkin and Konstantin Savitsky. Savitsky painted bears, but the collector Pavel Tretyakov erased his signature, so that the author of the painting is often indicated alone.

The idea for the painting was suggested to Shishkin by Savitsky, who later acted as a co-author and depicted the figures of the bear cubs. These bears, with some differences in poses and numbers (at first there were two of them), appear in the preparatory drawings and sketches. Savitsky turned out the animals so well that he even signed the painting together with Shishkin.

16. “We didn’t expect it.” Ilya Repin, 1884-1888

Painting by Russian artist Ilya Repin (1844-1930), painted in 1884-1888. It is part of the collection of the State Tretyakov Gallery.

The painting, shown at the XII traveling exhibition, is part of a narrative cycle dedicated to the fate of the Russian revolutionary populist.

17. “Ball at the Moulin de la Galette”, Pierre Auguste Renoir, 1876.

A painting painted by the French artist Pierre Auguste Renoir in 1876.

The place where the painting is located is the Musée d’Orsay. Moulin de la Galette is an inexpensive tavern in Montmartre, where students and working youth of Paris gathered.

18. "Starry Night." Vincent Van Gogh, 1889.

De sterrennacht- a painting by the Dutch artist Vincent Van Gogh, painted in June 1889, with a view of the pre-dawn sky over a fictional town from the eastern window of the artist’s home in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. Since 1941 it has been kept at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Considered one of Van Gogh's best works and one of the most significant works of Western painting.

19. “The Creation of Adam.” Michelangelo, 1511.

Fresco by Michelangelo, painted around 1511. The fresco is the fourth of nine central compositions of the Sistine Chapel ceiling.

“The Creation of Adam” is one of the most outstanding compositions of the Sistine Chapel painting. God the Father flies in infinite space, surrounded by wingless angels, with a flowing white tunic. The right hand is extended towards Adam's hand and almost touches it. Adam's body lying on the green rock gradually begins to move and awakens to life. The entire composition is concentrated on the gesture of two hands. The hand of God gives the impulse, and the hand of Adam receives it, giving vital energy to the whole body. By the fact that their hands do not touch, Michelangelo emphasized the impossibility of connecting the divine and the human. In the image of God, according to the artist’s plan, it is not the miraculous principle that prevails, but gigantic creative energy. In the image of Adam, Michelangelo glorifies the strength and beauty of the human body. In fact, what appears before us is not the creation of man itself, but the moment at which he receives a soul, a passionate search for the divine, a thirst for knowledge.

20. “Kiss in the starry sky.” Gustav Klimt, 1905-1907

Painting by the Austrian artist Gustav Klimt, painted in 1907-1908. The canvas belongs to the period of Klimt’s work, called the “golden”, the last work of the author in his “golden period”.

On a rock, on the edge of a flower meadow, in a golden aura, lovers stand completely immersed in each other, fenced off from the whole world. Due to the uncertainty of the place of what is happening, it seems that the couple depicted in the picture is moving into a cosmic state that is not subject to time and space, on the other side of all historical and social stereotypes and cataclysms. Complete solitude and the man's face turned back only emphasize the impression of isolation and detachment in relation to the observer.

Source – Wikipedia, muzei-mira.com, say-hi.me

20 paintings that everyone should know (history of painting) updated: November 23, 2016 by: website