Malaya Sadovaya (painting)

Malaya Sadovaya Street is a 1979 oil painting by the Russian artist Alexander Semionov, depicting Malaya Sadovaya Street in Leningrad on rainy day of the end of the 1970s. This cityscape was painted in traditions of the Leningrad School of Painting and Soviet figurative painting of late socialist realism with their typical synthesis of realistic and impressionistic traditions to create an image of modernity.

Malaya Sadovaya street
ArtistAlexander M. Semionov
Year1979
TypeOil on board
Dimensions70 cm × 60 cm (28 in × 24 in)
Locationprivate collection,
Russia

History

The painting is of special importance to the artistic reputation of Alexander Semionov. Created on the apex of his artistic career, five years before his death, it became one of his most famous works. In Malaya Sadovaya Street the artist presents the image of one of the most beautiful streets in the city, as well as a romantic and extremely attractive image of the Leningrad of the late of 1970s as at whole. In the painting Semionov convincingly conveyed a sense of time and place, the unhurried flow of Leningrad life.

In the late 1970s Alexander Semionov - a recognized master of the Leningrad landscape, with his recognizable handwriting. This genre took a leading place in his work in the 1960s. The artist invariably painted his works from nature as sketches-pictures, seeking the transmission of a live direct impression, working with the same success brush and palette knife.[1]

Semionov liked to painted the city in rainy weather, doing it with a special mood, masterfully passing the game of reflections on the wet asphalt, the shiny roofs of buses and cars, pedestrians under umbrellas, which are so consonant with our image of the city on the Neva. This theme was developed by him for decades and is reflected in the works Rainy Day (1958), Rainy Day in the Summer Garden (1961), On the Palace Square, On Kirov Prospekt (both 1965), Nevsky Prospekt (1977), Nevsky Prospekt in the Rain (1983), and others.

In 1979, in Leningrad, with great success, the first solo exhibition of the works of Semionov was held, which opened of this original master to the Leningrad audience. Most of the works shown at the exhibition belonged to the genre of the urban lyrical landscape. The warm response that met his creativity, inspired the artist, he experienced a sense of recovery and genuine inspiration, the need to express himself and his attitude towards Leningrad in new perfect forms.

Thus, the motif with Malaya Sadova was born, which the artist had long to seek. The classic proportions of the city-museum and the distinctive signs of the present, the recognizable architectural scenery and the city's equally obligatory signs, like rain, umbrellas and wet asphalt, the brightly drawn painter's picturesque accents and the general muffled palette, filled the entire composition with special Leningrad scattered light. So thanks to the inspiration of the master was created one of the most recognizable lyrical images of Leningrad in the 1970s.

Showing and publications

In the early 1980s a reproduction of this painting was printed by the state publishing house "Artist of the RSFSR" for mass distribution in the USSR.

After the death of Alexander Semionov in 1984, the painting Malaya Sadovaya Street was kept by the artist's widow, and in the early 1990s was sold into the private collection.

Malaya Sadovaya Street was exhibited for the first time in 1987 at a posthumous exhibition of works by Alexander Semionov in the exhibition halls of the Leningrad Union of Artists.[2] Then the painting was shown in towns of the Leningrad region. In 1994 the work was again exhibited in the exhibition halls of the Leningrad Union of Artists in the art show Paintings of 1950-1980s by the Leningrad School Artists,.[3]

In 1996 the painting was exhibited at the art show Paintings of 1940-1990s. The Leningrad School, in Saint Petersburg in the Nikolay Nekrasov Memorial Museum.[4] The painting was also reproduced on the cover of the exhibition catalog of the 1996 show.[5][6]

In 2005, the American company Soicher-Marin, Inc. released a poster with a picture of A. M. Semionov's Malaya Sadovaya Street, distributed in the US and around the world.

In 2007, the picture Malaya Sadovaya Street by Alexander Semionov was reproduced in the book Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School.[7] Also she was elected publishers to be placed on a dust jacket of the book.

In 2012, the painting by Semionov Malaya Sadovaya Street was exhibited in St. Petersburg at the Anniversary Exhibition 80 Years of the St. Petersburg Union of Artists at the Central Exhibition Hall "Manege" and was reproduced in the exhibition catalog.[8]

In 2014, the painting Malaya Sadovaya Street by Alexander Semionov was published in an article by Sergey Ivanov on the artist's creation in the two-volume reference and bibliographical collection Pages of Memory.[9][10]

gollark: Although there is composite video output and a MIPI-DSI port.
gollark: I believe it can do 4K, but only on one monitor.
gollark: Recent models have an interface for optional external uhs.
gollark: It is not currently believed to be sapient.
gollark: One of the pins is slightly bent, and it appears to have been exposed to enough sunlight that the labels are faded and the plastic is slightly yellowed.

References

  1. Иванов С. В. О ленинградских пейзажах Александра Семёнова. // Петербургские искусствоведческие тетради. Вып. 23. СПб, 2012. С.44.
  2. Alexander Mikhailovich Semionov. Exhibition of works of art. Leningrad, Leningrad Union of Artists, 1987.
  3. Paintings of 1950-1980s by the Leningrad School's artists. Exhibition catalogue. Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Union of artists, 1994. P.4.
  4. Paintings of 1940-1990s from the Leningrad School. Exhibition catalogue. Saint Petersburg, Nikolai Nekrasov Memorial Museum, 1996. P.4.
  5. А. Цыганов. Чтобы собирать такие картины, надо быть немного романтиком. – "Невское время", 13 марта 1996.
  6. Федоров С. Весна в городе и натюрморт с вербами. – "Смена", 6 марта 1996.
  7. Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School. Saint Petersburg, NP-Print Edition, 2007. P.56.
  8. Семёнов А. М. Малая Садовая. 1979 // 80 Лет Санкт-Петербургскому Союзу художников. Юбилейная выставка. СПб, 2012. С.212.
  9. А. М. Семёнов. Малая Садовая. 1979 / Иванов С. В. Семёнов Александр Михайлович //Страницы памяти. Справочно-биографический сборник. 1941—1945. Художники Санкт-Петербургского (Ленинградского) Союза художников — ветераны Великой Отечественной войны. Кн.2. СПб, Петрополис, 2014. С.305.
  10. Страницы памяти: справочно-биографический сборник. Художники Санкт-Петербургского (Ленинградского) Союза художников - ветераны Великой Отечественной войны. 1941-1945. Книга 2 [М-Я]

Sources

  • Alexander Mikhailovich Semionov. Exhibition of works of art. Leningrad, Leningrad Union of Artists, 1987.
  • Paintings of 1950-1980s by the Leningrad School's artists. Exhibition catalogue. Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Union of artists, 1994.
  • Paintings of 1940-1990s from the Leningrad School. Exhibition catalogue. Saint Petersburg, Nikolai Nekrasov Memorial Museum, 1996.
  • А. Цыганов. Чтобы собирать такие картины, надо быть немного романтиком. Невское время, 13 марта 1996.
  • Федоров С. Весна в городе и натюрморт с вербами. Смена, 6 марта 1996.
  • Sergei V. Ivanov. Unknown Socialist Realism. The Leningrad School. Saint Petersburg, NP-Print Edition, 2007. P.56.
  • Иванов С. В. О ленинградских пейзажах Александра Семёнова. // Петербургские искусствоведческие тетради. Вып. 23. СПб, 2012. С.43–46.
  • Семёнов А. М. Малая Садовая. 1979 // 80 Лет Санкт-Петербургскому Союзу художников. Юбилейная выставка. СПб, 2012. С.212.
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