Page 10 - Maastricht 2022 Catalogue
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Ivan Shishkin

                       EDGE OF THE FOREST, (SIVERSKAYA)


            Referred to as the “Tsar of the Forest” during his lifetime, Ivan   Painted in 1881, the setting of our woodland scene is Siverskaya,
            Shishkin (1832-1898) is considered one of Russia’s greatest   located 70 kilometers south of St. Petersburg. Shishkin had explored
            landscape painters. To quote one of his contemporaries, “We know   the region with fellow Peredvizhniki, Kramskoi and Savitsky in 1872;
            no other artist who possesses such impeccable technique or who   with the natural beauty of the terrain and the towering trees of the
            so faithfully and with such deep affection for his native land and   forest, Shishkin found his muse in Siverskaya, and it provided him
            his art portrays the Russian nature that is so dear to us. In the   with endless natural subjects for the rest of his career. Siverskya was
            depiction of the Russian forest, Shishkin has no rivals.” (Victoria   to Shishkin what Ville d’Avray had been to Jean-Baptiste-Camille
            Charles and Irina Shuvalova, Ivan Shishkin, 2013, Kindle edition, p.   Corot and Fontainebleau Forest had been to Théodore Rousseau; the
            108). While the Russian forest provided Shishkin with an endless   shared understanding of a force in nature so strong that it beckoned
            source of inspiration, equally, his paintings defined Russia by always   to be repeated over and over. Shishkin’s woodland subjects have
            promoting a sense of pride in the native landscape.    been referred to as “forest portraiture” and it is tempting to assign
                                                                   attributes such as “close up” and “full length” when describing the
            A turning point in Shishkin’s career came in 1870, when together   trees with their sturdy trunks covered with crusted bark, twisting
            with a group of Russia’s and Ukraine’s most talented artists,   branches and feathery pine needles. Here we see a “close up” view of
            including Ilya Repin (1844-1930), Vasily Surikov (1848-1916), Ivan   the forest in light and shadow, a trademark Shishkin vantage point,
            Kramskoi (1837-1887), Viktor Vasnetsov (1848-1926) and Konstantin   where the towering pine trees – their trunks softly illuminated in
            Savitsky (1844-1905), he founded the Society for Travelling Exhibitions   sunshine, extend out of the picture and reach upwards beyond the
            or Peredvizhniki. While a focus of the group was to feature realistic   blue sky.
            contemporary life in Russia (best exemplified by Ilya Repin’s Volga
            Barge Haulers from 1870-73, State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg),
            there was also a keen interest in depicting the diverse beauty of the
            Russian countryside, such as exemplified in Shishkin’s landscapes
            and especially in his pine forests. The ideology of the Peredvizhniki
            remained with Shishkin for the rest of his career and was a defining
            characteristic of his landscapes from the 1880s, such as Siverskaya -
            Edge of the Forest.





















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