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Orest Kiprensky (1782-1836)

O

rest Kiprensky, the great portraitist of the early nineteenth century, was born in the Ora-nienbaum district of Petersburg Gubernia, on an estate belonging to the landowner A. S. Diakonov. The future artist was entered in the register of Koporye church as the illegitimate son of the peasant girl Anna Gavrilova, who a year after the birth of her son was married to the landowner's manservant Adam Schwalbe.

In 1788 Kiprensky was sent to the school run by the Academy of Arts and nine years later he entered the class of historical painting, which was usually reserved for pupils who displayed some ability. His teachers were the professor of historical painting G. I. Ugryumov and the mas­ter of plafond and decorative painting Gabriel-Francois de Doyen.

The artist won his first gold medal in 1805 for the historical canvas Dmitri Donskoi on Sus­taining Victory over Mamai (RM). But it was not historical painting that brought him fame.

As early as 1804 Kiprensky painted one of his most talented works—a portrait of his father, Adam Schwalbe (RM). The portrait is impres­sive because of its remarkable maturity, its deep understanding of human nature, and the level of mastery attained at such an early stage in the artist's career. We see a self-willed man, full of dignity and spiritual strength. The work is realised in warm colours with free, sweep­ing brushwork, built on contrasts of light and shade.

This brilliant portrait impressed Kiprensky's contemporaries. In 1830 it was displayed at an art exhibition in Naples and, as the artist himself wrote, 'the Academy here concocted the follow­ing ideas . . . some considered the portrait of my father a Rubens masterpiece, others thought it was a Van Dyck, while a certain Albertini went as far as Rembrandt!'

The artist's early works included a Self-Por-trait (1808, RM). The easy-going, elevated character of this inspired image, and the distinc­tive style of painting and composition, were clear signs of a new attitude to portraiture.

Both the personality and the work of the artist were suffused with the spirit of the liberal first decades of the nineteenth century. Kiprensky was a romantic artist, the first of the portraitists to catch the tenor of the age and to poeticise the value and beauty of man's spiritual wealth. 'Who said that feelings deceive us?' he wrote in an album of drawings.

The year 1808 saw the start of Kiprensky's friendship with the well-known collector and art patron A. R. Tomilov, whose house was one of the centres of artistic life of the first quarter of the nineteenth century.

It was around this time that artist painted por­traits of A. R. Tomilov (1808, RM), I. V. Kusov (1808, RM), A. I. Korsakov (1808, RM) and al­so another Self-Portrait (c. 1809, TG).

On 27 February 1809 Kiprensky left for Mos­cow, where he was to help Ivan Martos com­plete his work on the monument to Minin and Pozharsky. In Moscow the artist's contacts wid­ened. In Rastopchin's salon and at Mme Mura-vyova's house, he met the poets K. N. Batyush-kov, P. A. Vyazemsky, V. A. Zhukovsky, S. P. Marin, and also Denis and Yevgraf Davydov. He was enormously influenced by the atmo­sphere of such meetings and creative discus­sions, by Rastopchin's private art gallery (which had something like 300 exhibits, including pic­tures by Velazquez, Van Dyck and Tintoretto) and by the pre-war mood of Russian society.

Abounding in impressions, Kiprensky's life in Moscow was conducive to intensive artistic acti­vity. 'Kiprensky is half-crazed by his work and by his imagination,' wrote Rastopchin to the conference secretary of the Academy of Arts, A. F. Labzin.

Among the best works of the Moscow period, 1809-1812, are portraits of A. A. Chelishchev (1810-11, TG), Ye. P. Rastopchina (1809, TG) and Ye. V. Davydov (1809, RM). In his full-dress portrait of Ye. V. Davydov, a hero of the 1812 war decorated with the gold sword for his bravery, Kiprensky strove to depict a man of a progressive turn of mind, a forerunner of new social forces in Russia. The attraction of the portrait lies in the nobility, dignity and emotion­al elevation of the character.

In March 1812 Kiprensky returned to St. Pe­tersburg. For several of his portraits—including those of Ye. V. Davydov, Prince Oldenburgsky, I, A. Gagarin and A. I. Kusov—he was awarded the title of academician of portrait painting.

Kiprensky reached his peak as a portraitist at the time of the 1812 war. 'The Patriotic War gave us our Curtiuses, Scaevolas and Regulu-ses,' wrote a veteran of that war, P. Svinyin. As though in a rush to record the heroes of the war, Kiprensky made numerous pencil drawings. A series of graphic portraits depicted the artist's friends: the brothers M. and A. Lanskoi, Gene­ral Chaplits, the home guards A. P. Tomilov and P. A. Olenin, the poets K. N. Batyushkov, I. I. Kozlov and V. A. Zhukovsky, and the fable-writer I. A. Krylov.

He also produced a series of pencil portraits of children and young people, which are marked with joyful sense of purpose and by the gen­eral harmoniousness that typified Kiprensky's work of that period. Such were the portraits of N. Kochubei, Petya Olenin, the peasant boys Andryusha and Moska, the Kalmyk girl Bayausta, the future Decembrists N. M. Mura-vyov and A. P. Bakunin. Kiprensky's drawings made an invaluable contribution to the develop­ment of world graphic portraiture.

Some of Kiprensky's best paintings also date from this time—including his masterly portrait of D. N. Khvostova (1814, TG).
In mid-May 1816, having received the title of Adviser to the Academy of Arts, he was given state support to travel to Italy thanks to the en­deavours of his friends, especially the writer Zhukovsky.

During his years in Italy (1816-1823) the ar­tist continued to work intensively. However, his mood and to some extent his works of this period were affected by the hostile atti­tude towards him of the civil servants in the Russian embassy in Rome, who kept an eye on their pensioners, and by the upheavals of the revolution in Italy. Among his best works of these years were his portrait of A. M. Golitsyn (c. 1819, TG), his pencil portrait of S. S. Shcherbatova (1819, TG) and his fa­mous Self-Portrait of 1819 , which was commis­sioned by the Florence Academy for the Uffici Gallery.

This Self-Portrait brings out new traits of the painter's work. Here, nothing remains of the sparkling immediacy and thirst for life that were the keynote of his earlier self-portrait. The world around him had lost its joyful attraction and was daubed in sombre hues. Kiprensky was acutely aware of the dichotomy between ideals and reality.

In July 1823 Kiprensky returned to his home­land, which was going through a period of cruel reaction under the auspices of the chairman of the Military Department Arakcheyev. Arak-cheyev and the Minister Guriev were made hon­orary members of the Academy of Arts. 'The Academy,' wrote Kiprensky on his return to St. Petersburg, 'has grown mouldy.'

The suppression of the Decembrist Uprising in 1825 threw Kiprensky into a state of grief and disillusion. There is no information available on the artist's attitude to the Decembrists' secret society, but he did meet many of them at the house of the officer of household cavalry D. N. Sheremetiev, and was on friendly terms with some of them. He was most certainly deeply moved by their fate, as was a considerable part of Russian society.

Despite his cold official welcome in Russia and serious inner crisis, Kiprensky's mastery in no way flagged. His portrait of the poet Alexan­der Pushkin (1827, TG) was his greatest achieve­ment in the field of portraiture. It was painted at the request of Delvig, a poet and friend of Pushkin, between May and July 1827, while the latter was on a short stay in St. Petersburg. Pushkin liked the portrait and acquired it after Delvig's death. He dedicated the following lines to Kiprensky:

Loved-one. of light-winged fashion
Though neither French nor English born
You re-created me, magician,
The crystal muses' chosen one.

There was a general feeling of indignation at the fact that Kiprensky, who had made such impressively realistic drawings and paintings of participants in the 1812 War, was not asked to paint portraits for the official 1812 War Gallery. Alexander I passed over other Russian artists too, and gave the commission to the English ar­tist George Dawe.

'I went to Italy,' wrote Kiprensky, 'with the sole purpose of bringing to Russia the fruits of a more mature talent, but instead, on my return I was covered in the envy of my adversaries. Ignoring this envy, I always strode firmly on­wards, knowing that sooner or later time always reveals the truth.'

At the end of the twenties he again left for Italy. His marriage to his former pupil and inspiration Maria Falcucci failed to brighten up the last years of his life.

Orest Kiprensky died on 5 October 1836 and was buried in Rome.

'The celebrated Kiprensky has died,' wrote the artist A. A. Ivanov from Italy. 'He was the first to bring fame to a Russian name in Eu­rope . . . Kiprensky was never decorated and never granted favours by the Court—and all for the simple reason that he was too noble and proud to seek such things.'