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To western eyes much of Russian art will be a mystery, but Russian culture has a long and rich history and it’s art is no different. Here are some of the most famous Russian painters to ever pick up a brush. Famous Russian Artists 1. Wassily Kandinsky
- Socialist Realism
Many famous Russian artists had no choice but to concede and...
- Famous Female Artist
Tracey Emin is a contemporary artist who creates works rich...
- Romanticism Painter
Aivazovsky had many personal ties to the Russian Empire’s...
- 11 Most Famous Realism Artists
He was a Ukrainian and Russian realist painter born on...
- Famous Demon Paintings
Vrubel was one artist who chose to depict his idea of a...
- Portraits
The Mona Lisa is one of the most famous paintings ever and...
- Ocean Paintings
This work was painted sometime between 1808 and 1810 and is...
- Socialist Realism
- Andrei Rublev (c. 1360-1438) This is Russia’s most famous icon painter, who lived at the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries. Not many of his works – icons and church paintings – have survived to our day.
- Alexander Ivanov (1806-1858) Religious paintings occupy a large segment of Russian art right until the end of the 19th century. One of the genre’s most famous representatives is Alexander Ivanov.
- Ivan Aivazovsky (1817-1900) The leading Russian seascape painter was born on the shores of the Black Sea in Crimea, and spent the majority of his young life there, watching and admiring the seascapes and depicting them on canvas.
- Ilya Repin (1844-1930) One of Russia’s leading realist painters gained fame in his lifetime working in a wide variety of artistic genres. His portraits are distinguished for their incredible realism and vivacity (in particular, he produced about a dozen Leo Tolstoy portraits).
- AES+F Group
- Ivan Aivazovsky
- Yuri Albert
- Leon Bakst
- Andrey Bartenev
- Ely Bielutin
- Victor Borisov-Musatov
- Karl Bryullov
- Vladimir Borovikovsky
- Grisha Bruskin
Considered one of the most successful and famous art groups today, AES+F has exhibitions all over the world. The multimedia installations and projects by Tatyana Arzamasova, Lev Yevzovich, Yevgeny Svyatsky and Vladimir Fridkes are devoted, primarily, to global culture and an analysis of modern values. Their installation film “Inverso Mundus” (Latin...
No-one paints the sea like Ivan could! Painter Aivazovsky was revered as one of the most prolific artists, creating over 6,000 seascapes. Art historians and art critics consider ‘The Black Sea’ artwork to be his magnum opus, the result of the artist's rethinking of his life and career.
Albert’s famous artworks with text often become Internet memes, while his retrospective exhibition, "What did the artist mean by that?" at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, remained in a state of permanent change throughout its duration. This is what Yuri Albert is all about. At the age of 15, this conceptualist artist found himself in the workshop ...
The European success of Sergei Diaghilev's famous Russian Seasons in Paris was largely due to Bakst. His sets and costume sketches for Ballets Russes productions became a sensation in their own right: they were even exhibited in the Louvre, while Bakst's Orientalist style set a fashion in Paris for turbans, wide trousers and colored wigs.
The eccentric Bartenev made a name for himself in the 1990s: his costumes made of any available materials, as well as performances and installations, became a symbol of the time. Since then, he has become known as "a master of the outrageous", a one-man festivity and a walking performance: Bartenev stands out in a crowd thanks to his bright freakis...
Avant-garde artist Bielutin had a reputation for experimentation and mystification. He set up a studio in Moscow and a kind of a school called New Reality, which united more than 3,000 artists. In 1962, works by his studio's abstract artists were exhibited at the Manezh exhibition hall in Moscow. The exhibition was visited by Communist Party Secret...
Borisov-Musatov was a symbolist, who specialized in painting dilapidated old manors, garden tea parties and members of the Russian nobility at the turn of last century. They say that as a representative of the Silver Age, he tried to capture "the vanishing world" and the last echoes of an outgoing era. ‘The Pool’ was the starting point of his recog...
Bryullov was one of the best portrait painters of his time. He painted official and private portraits of the Russian aristocracy, attended imperial receptions and knew Alexander Pushkin. But all that came after 12 years living in Italy, six of which Bryullov had spent working on his monumental work ‘The Last Day of Pompeii’. For it, the artist rece...
He painted the Russian aristocracy, including the emperor, but is better known for his portraits of young ladies, which are displayed not only in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow but also at the Louvrein Paris. Borovikovsky's trademark achievement was his ability to express the distinct sensuality of his models.
In the Soviet Union, his works were rejected, and he found recognition only with the start of perestroika. In 1988, at Sotheby's first and only auction in the USSR, his "Fundamental Lexicon" was sold to a Western collector for a (then) record-breaking $416,000 (following an interrogation by the KGB, the predecessor to the FSB). A couple of weeks la...
- Yekaterina Sinelschikova
- Wassily Kandinsky. Lifespan: December 16,1866 – December 13, 1944. Initially a teacher of law and economics, Wassily Kandinsky gave up his promising career to pursue his interests in art.
- Marc Chagall. Lifespan: July 6, 1887 – March 28, 1985. Marc Zakharovich Chagall was one of the most influential modern artists. He was associated with a number of modern art movements including Cubism, Symbolism, Fauvism and Surrealism.
- Kazimir Malevich. Lifespan: February 23, 1878 – May 15, 1935. Geometric abstraction is a form of abstract art based on the use of geometric forms. Kazimir Malevich was the founder of the art movement known as Suprematism, which focused on basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines, and rectangles, and the use of limited range of colors.
- Ilya Repin. Lifespan: August 5, 1844 – September 29, 1930. Ilya Repin was also a member of Peredvizhniki. His works are categorized under Social Realism, a genre which draws attention to the everyday conditions of the working class and the poor; and is critical of social structures that lead to these conditions.
From “Ninth Wave” to “Black Square,” these famous Russian paintings are known by almost everyone in the country, and can be seen on school or hotel walls, and even on chocolate boxes and ...
From celebrated icons such as Wassily Kandinsky and Ivan Aivazovsky to lesser-known gems like Lyubov Popova, these 20 famous Russian artists represent diverse periods, styles, and genres that showcase Russia’s rich cultural heritage in visual arts.
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Feb 14, 2022 · Most of the best-known Russian artists worked during the period when Realism artists became dominant in the 19th century, and during the Russian avant-garde in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. So who were the most famous Russian artists in history? Let’s take a closer look!