Igor Grabar

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Self-Portrait. 1934, oil on canvas. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
Self-Portrait. 1934, oil on canvas. The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

Igor Emmanuilovich Grabar (Russian: Игорь Эммануилович Грабарь, March 25, 1871, BudapestMay 16, 1960, Moscow) was a Russian painter and a representative mainly of socialist realism. After being graduated from the department of law at Petersburg University he turned to art. Studied in the Saint Petersburg Academy of Arts in 18941896 and in Munich. In his early years Grabar was influenced by the jugendstil and later by impressionism, but his paintings "The Chrysanthema" and "The Uncleared Table" are closer to neoimpressionism. In 1913 - 1925 he was the head of the Tretyakov Gallery. Grabar was recognized as a People's Artist of the Soviet Union in 1956 for his work in the areas of portrait painting and historical revolutionary themes. He also was a full member of Soviet Academy of Sciences (since 1943) and got a Stalin Prize (1941).

Still life
Still life
Lenin at the Direct Line
Lenin at the Direct Line

Contents

  • "A Lady with Dog" (1899)
  • "September Snow" (1903)
  • "February Azure" (1904)
  • "A White Winter. The Nests of Rooks" (1904)
  • "The Bright Autumnal Evening" (1923)
  • "The Winter Sunny Day" (1941)

The picture (Russian: "Ленин у прямого провода") was painted in 1933. However a Soviet military commander Alexander Yegorov, known as an enthusiastic collector of the battle-pieces, described this painting when it was named "Stalin at the South Front". When the cult of personality was debunked, Grabar repainted the picture and transferred the scene from the Front Stuff to Kremlin while the characters on the painting have been regrouped. However "Lenin at the Direct Line" was recognized as a rather perfect in the sense of painting but the figure of Stalin can still be seen in X-rays in the lower layer.

Many of Grabar's contemporaries called him the conformist and he was even nicknamed "Угорь Обмануилович" (Ugor Obmanuilovich - a Russian allusion to the eel and lie, similar to Grabar's original name and patronymic).


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