Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • Finally, it was profound speculation on the concepts of the Gospels that brought Ivanov to paint his "The Appearance of Christ to the People" (1837-57), an attempt to show people at the moment of their most crucial spiritual challenge.
      www.tretyakovgallerymagazine.com/articles/4-2005-09/appearance-christ-people-life-long-enterprise
  1. People also ask

  2. The Appearance of Christ Before the People (Russian: Явление Христа народу Yavleniye Khrista narodu) or The Apparition of the Messiah is an oil painting on canvas, measuring 540 cm × 750 cm, by the Russian painter Alexander Andreyevich Ivanov (1806–1858).

  3. Why did Ivanov so stubbornly emphasize that his painting was a historical one? The explanation might be found in one of his letters to a friend: "Religion has become a cadaver," he wrote.

  4. May 15, 2011 · This is what happened to Alexander Ivanov and his monumental painting The Appearance of Christ to the People. This oil on canvas work measures 540cms x 750cms (18ft x 24ft 6ins). Ivanov started on the painting in 1837 and did not complete and exhibit it in St Petersburg until 1858.

  5. The Appearance of Christ to the people or The Apparition of the Messiah is an oil painting on canvas by the Russian painter Alexander Ivanov (1806 -1858). It took twenty years to complete (1837–1857). The narrative of the painting is based on the first chapter of the Gospel, according to John.

  6. Jul 24, 2024 · Aleksandr Andreyevich Ivanov was a Russian painter best known for his Appearance of Christ to the People. A single-minded and inveterate idealist, Ivanov opened for Russian art the Romantic mythology of martyrdom for art’s sake. Ivanov’s artistic path was marked by unusual consistency.

  7. Ivanov toiled for 20 years on the most important painting of his life – about the appearance of Christ before the people when St John was baptizing people in the Jordan River.

  8. Picture and description of a work by Alexander Ivanov: The Appearance of Christ before the People. Oil on canvas (60 x 90 cm), dated 1837-1857.