An essay based on a painting by A.A. Rylov “Green noise. Essay based on Rylov’s painting Green Noise (description)

Description of Rylov’s painting “Green Noise”

Arkady Aleksandrovich Rylov is one of the outstanding and famous Russian landscape painters.
His mood landscapes have repeatedly surprised not only art lovers, but also the creators themselves.
Having lived in the North for many years, he put his love for these places into his paintings.
His painting “Green Noise” brought great delight and fame to the author.

Work on this painting lasted two years.
The author created three copies of such raging beauty.
All of them occupy places of honor in the Russian Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery and the Kiev Museum of Russian Art.

The first impression that is created when looking at the picture is that it is bright.
Saturated green and blue colors amaze with their violence.
Even a blue sky with white clouds glows with brightness and contrast.
The author showed us a hill near the river.
A small green clearing among mighty trees opens beautiful view onto a winding river with white sails.
But the trees attract the most attention.
They move just like that in the picture from the strong wind.
Their branches are tilted in one direction or the other, creating the impression of sounding noise.
The author observed all these beauties in his native land.
He wanted to convey not only the beauty of nature, but also its character and sound.

When you look at this work, you get the impression that you are looking out the window, inhaling Fresh air, feel the aroma of nature and hear its song.
This is amazing.

Green noise

Arkady Rylov is an outstanding Russian landscape artist born in 1870. His canvases surprise with their mood and beauty, thereby delighting not only the audience but also the performer himself. Rylov was born on the way (his parents were heading to Vyatka) and most lived in the North throughout his life and lovingly put all the beauty of those places into his paintings, and the canvas “green noise”, on which he worked for two whole years, glorified the artist. He conveyed not only the incredible beauty of his native places, but also sound, character, harmony and thoughts. In 1904, three copies were already created, and all of them are in Russian museums.

The first thing that catches your eye when looking at this masterpiece is its brightness, colorfulness, and saturation. The clear blue sky, decorated with snow-white clouds, gives contrast to the dark green trees and blue water. The picture conveys life and youth with its entire appearance, despite the depicted trees that are not even a dozen years old.

The author painted a wonderful landscape sunny day. The view opens from above, from a mountain on which large mighty trees grow, and below a wide winding river flows, and white sailboats float along it. Due to unclear images of grass and tree crowns, it is clear that it is blowing strong wind bends the branches with all his might, creating noise.

Looking at the picture, I get the impression that I am in that clearing and looking at the real, and not at the painted, beauty of nature. I breathe in the fresh air, smell fresh grass, the aromas of small but fragrant flowers and hear the song of rustling leaves.
The name of this painting was given by Bogaevsky, who was one of the first invited, together with Kuindzhi, to evaluate the painting. Looking at it for the first time, he began to quote Nekrasov’s poem “Green Noise,” words that fit perfectly with the landscape, and the assigned name remained.

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Essay based on the painting by A. A. Rylov “ Green noise»

"I dedicated my art native landscape, because I love my country, I love its nature.”

A. A. Rylov

aesthetically educate students, broaden their horizons.

During the classes:

A story about an artist.

A. A. Rylov is a Russian landscape artist. A landscape artist creates landscapes and paintings in which nature is the main subject of the image. Among Russian landscape painters of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Rylov is one of the largest painters. In his works he glorified his native nature.

R. was born on January 30, 1870 in the village of Istobenskoye, not far from Vyatka (now the city of Istobensk Kirov region).

R. spent his childhood and youth among the Vyatka forests. His passion for hunting and travel allowed him to learn and love the harsh region early on. R. knew how to set a sail, loved to rush in a boat along a disheveled river, not afraid of the foaming waves, exposing his face to the wind. He and his friends went through the spring water into the forests to listen to the singing of birds and watch the awakening of nature. “Life by the fire, by the water, among wild, untouched nature, brought up the landscape artist in me,” the artist recalled.

R. had an early attraction to art. He began to draw what he saw around him. These drawings were still simple, but the observation skills of the future artist were already visible in them.

Friends advised him to go study. Together with a friend R. went to St. Petersburg and first entered the school technical drawing, and then to the Academy of Arts, where he began to study with the famous Russian artist A. I. Kuindzhi. Kuindzhi taught R. that one should only draw impressions from nature, and only learn painting from it.

People who knew R. remembered him as a man with “blue, radiant eyes, with a clear, affectionate and kind smile.” He had a huge reserve of vigor and love of life.

Building his workshop in the middle of the forest or arranging a “piece of forest” in the middle of his workshop, he knew how to talk with the forest inhabitants. Sunrises and warblers, hares and squirrels understood and obeyed him. They lived for a long time in the artist’s studio, and he rewarded them for their friendship with freedom, letting them go into the forest in the spring.

The artist's attitude towards life is visible in his paintings. Looking at the mighty northern spruces, at the flying white clouds, at the fabulous forest streams and squirrels and birds curiously peeking from behind the branches, it seems that the artist is saying: “ Good morning! Good morning to the world!”

In 1935, A. A. Rylov was awarded the title of Honored Artist of the RSFSR.

Analysis of the picture.

The painting “Green Noise”, a reproduction of which you see on the board, is one of best works Russian landscape painting. Reproduction is...

Is it easy to understand a picture of nature?

Why isn't this a photograph?

It was not by chance that R. came up with the theme of the painting. R. really lived on the steep high bank of the Vyatka, and birch trees rustled above his head, behind which a distance with lakes and forests opened up.

This painting is the result of enormous work; he redid it several times.

A true artist has the ability to awaken feelings and observations that our memory stores. Stopping attention, his paintings seem to speak to us. The still image comes to life and begins to move. The colors are reminiscent of the smells of the earth. The blue sky fills the air. The wind bends thin tree trunks, throws away young leaves, and it seems to make noise.

It flares up with renewed vigor, then the noise of the leaves subsides. And the artist calls the painting “Green Noise.”

Let's take a closer look at the picture. What do you remember now? (summer, sunny warm day, wind).

But in the picture we do not see the sun. How did you determine that the day was sunny? (clouds are brightly lit, high blue sky, bright green grass and foliage of trees, shadows fall from trees).

What is the composition of the painting? Composition is... What do we see in the foreground of the picture? (birch trees, they bend in the wind).

What's behind? (river, small boats with white inflated sails, the sky is light blue, lush white clouds float across it).

The two main colors are green and blue, but how many shades they have! What shades of green do you see? (light green foliage of young birches; dark green foliage of old birches, turning black in the shade; lush green grass).

What shades? of blue color is there in the picture? (the sky is dark blue at the top, very light at the horizon, and the water in the river is blue, sometimes very dark).

Is it a still image that we see in the painting?

How did the artist show this movement?

Why is the picture called “Green Noise”?

What we see in the picture is familiar to each of us. We saw the trees bending from the wind and heard their leaves rustling. But, looking at this landscape, we not only remember familiar images, we see something new, unfamiliar to us until now. Therefore, Rylov’s creativity brings us joy.

Planning.

1. What did I learn about the artist A. A. Rylov.

(options: What is a landscape.

The artist's love for native nature.)

2. Painting “Green Noise”:

What memories does the painting evoke?

Foreground: restless tree crowns, summer sky, air;

Background: a winding ribbon of a river, vast expanses...

What colors predominate in the picture and why?

Why is the picture called “Green Noise”?

3. The creativity of A. A. Rylov brings joy to people.

Vocabulary work.

painting

landscape artist

creation

reproduction

composition

warm colors

cold tones

light blue

dark green

rustle

tremble

Independent work students.

Materials:

The sky is high, azure, blue.

Beautiful cumulus clouds calmly and smoothly glide across the azure.

Leaves, foliage, crowns, greenery. The green crown has grown luxuriantly, lush foliage, green braids of birches, the branches of young birches flutter in the wind.

The wind throws away leaves, disturbs, disturbs, moves the crowns, bends the trunks, makes noise.

“When I arrived in Moscow, this green noise remained in my ears.”

“The picture is filled with light and air, ... the river makes a majestic flow, and the sky is real, bottomless, deep.”

Our daughter is in 3rd grade, and she was asked to write an essay based on Arkady Rylov’s painting “Green Noise.” Here is the picture:

And here is Katino’s essay:

“The painting “Green Noise” by Arkady Rylov depicts a windy summer day. Trees standing on a steep bank bend under the gusts of strong wind. Their foliage rustles and flutters. Thin young birch trees seem to want to get off the ground and fly away with the wind, but the mature trees do not allow them. The clouds ask the mother birch to let the children go, but she does not agree. The trees make noise and argue louder and louder.
In the background, small boats under sails rush along a wide river. A strong wind carries them lightly, like feathers. Even the clouds can't catch up with them.
This picture gives me a feeling of admiration for nature, its beauty and power."

I must say that this picture evokes completely opposite feelings for me. For me, a strong wind is fear, anxiety, danger! I would say that this painting is catastrophic, that the artist captured the beginning of a storm. In the distance, the sky is still soft turquoise, but heavy clouds creeping from behind the edge of the picture foreshadow an approaching hurricane. The raging river is rapidly carrying uncontrollable boats. They fail to moor to the shore, and they will certainly crash! Young birch trees bowed down in powerless prayer, but this will not help - they will still be uprooted. Big trees they feel that they will be mercilessly broken, but for now they have the strength to withstand the oncoming wind. This picture gives me a feeling of doom and powerlessness in the face of the wild elements.

After we expressed our impressions, we decided to read what they write about this picture in the literature. And it turned out that daughter Katya turned out to be closer to the artist’s plan than her mother: Rylov himself writes in his memoirs that he “tried to convey the feeling of the Merry noise of the birches.” And the progressive public of that time (the picture was painted in the pre-revolutionary year of 1904) generally saw in it a hint of the approaching “thunderous rumbles of a social storm” and “a symbol of the coming social renewal.”

  • 9 October 2011
  • 12 Comments

A comment

    Katya received an “A” for her essay. The teacher even wrote to her “Well done!” in a notebook. But we missed the Russian language Olympics. While we were about to “start preparing for it,” it had already passed (((

    Katya’s essay is excellent, it’s immediately obvious that the child reads a lot. All essays are difficult for us; we write according to suggestions.

    The copy from the painting “Green Noise” turned out ominous. The river and the sky are inky. The youngest granddaughter has heard enough of your thoughts about the painting, and now, golden autumn calls it “yellow noise” in the yard! After all, the wind carries yellow leaves from the trees with noise! And yellow leaves rustle underfoot.

    And in my head I immediately begin reciting the poem “Green noise, green noise, spring noise!”
    The colors on the copy are really abnormal. It doesn’t give me any feelings at all, to be honest.

    young birches of the same age, but apparently grew in different places, judging by the curvature of the trunks, and Rylov does not instill fear, rather the expectation of cold weather without rain.

    young birches of the same age, but apparently grew in different places, judging by the curvature of the trunks, but Rylov does not instill fear, rather the expectation of cold weather without rain.

    I think the essay is good, it’s not for nothing that the teacher praised it

I really love going to art galleries and look at the works of artists, imbued with a variety of feelings. I especially like paintings that depict nature with all its delights. You look and you understand how much we happy people, because we live among such beauty. It's a pity that not everyone sees it. This is probably why the role of artists is invaluable, because they are the ones who help to examine this beauty. And then one day, having visited Tretyakov Gallery, my attention was attracted by the wonderful work of Arkady Rylov, Green Noise.

In fact, Rylov created many paintings, capturing the beauty of the places where he lived. But the most remarkable and famous are two works: In the Blue Expanse and Green Noise. It’s the second one that we’ll talk about today.

The painting Green Noise, which relates to landscape painting, was painted by Rylov in 1904. It took the author two years to work on this painting. He rewrote it many times in order to convey not only nature with its riot of colors, but also sounds, noise, and movement. Convey the sensations that arise when you look from a hill at the vast expanses, at the wide river and green grove. And in the film Green Noise, Rylov succeeded. The canvas brought fame to the author, and the country received a wonderful work in its collection of paintings, which causes many mixed emotions.

Description of the picture

The painting Green Noise by Arkady Rylov is very interesting and evokes a storm of emotions. You look at her and the first feeling is the most wonderful. I would like to admire the rich colors, the wide expanse of water that can be seen in the background, the beauty and slenderness of the birch trees, whose branches flutter in the wind. But as soon as you look at the author’s work more closely, a feeling of anxiety appears. You begin to hear the sound of birch leaves being blown by a strong wind. Old birches don’t care about this wind, but it can uproot young birches, destroying this beauty.

Looking at the picture, you understand that a storm is most likely approaching. The wind is already beginning to gain strength. The sky is depicted in light colors, which allowed the author to emphasize the brightness and richness of other colors, highlighting the blue water and green tree crowns. However, clouds begin to gather in the sky. Perhaps very soon it will rain from them.

When I look at the picture, it seems to me that I am there, and my face is blown by streams of wind. I stand on a hill and cannot take my eyes off the approaching elements. My ears enjoy the music, which creates an orchestra of green noise and wind blowing, and beautiful words from Nekrasov’s poem are spinning in my head. same name Green noise.