Oleg Vassiliev: Recent Works
Faggionato Fine Arts, 49 Albemarle Street, London W1, until 23 January 2009
The septuagenarian Russian artist Oleg Vassiliev is exhibiting for the first time in London. Vassiliev was born in Moscow, in 1931, and studied graphic art at the Surikov Art Institute (Moscow State Art Institute), a training which provided him with both an extraordinary technical understanding of the use of pencil, and the means of a livelihood as a book illustrator in Soviet Russia. In the spring and autumn months Vassiliev was able to explore the landscape immediate to Moscow with fellow artists, as well as ideas as to what constituted art. The resultant paintings, though not overtly politically motivated, inevitably fell into the category of ‘unofficial art’ when publicly exhibited; Vassiliev emigrated to the USA in 1990.
Vassiliev’s paintings and drawings have embraced several specifically Russian and international aspects of art practice and its history. Both early works and the current eight paintings and drawings on display show the legacy of the revival in late-19th-century landscape painting in Russia and Northern Europe; much of this art falls within the category of Landscape Symbolism and the attendant discovery of national landscape characteristics. For Russia this meant the sheer vastness of the country, its cultivated land as well as the wilderness, meadows, woodland and waterways, and the creation of new subjects and ways of composing compositions. In Russia the aptly named artists’ co-operative ‘The Wanderers’ was established in 1870. Particularly important to Vassiliev were the paintings of Alexei Savrasov, who created images of country roads and muddy cart-tracks; Ivan Shishkin, who studied in Germany at the Düsseldorf Academy, a leading centre in European landscape painting, and who espoused large-scale paintings with precision realism; and the poetical mood of Isaak Levitan’s paintings. Vassiliev has also worked in a less figurative and abstract way, in response to Russian modernism, exemplified by the archetypal modernist Kasimir Malevich.
More articles from: Angela Summerfield | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
On the Saturday night of Glastonbury festival I wasn’t off my face in a field listening to some banging techno, but at the Museum of Garden History watching the noted harpsichordist William Christie and two marvellous sopranos perform songs by Purcell.
There was much talk (or you could say waffle) about expenses, salaries and the Ross/Brand affair when Steve Hewlett interviewed the BBC’s DG, Mark Thompson, for The Media Show last week (Radio Four).
Ashes, Les Ballets C de la B
Queen Elizabeth Hall
Public Enemies
15, Nationwide
Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme
Hampstead
Carrie’s War
Apollo
Before boarding the flight to Moscow, it dawned on me that I might have somehow contracted swine flu from Michael Nyman.
Isa Genzken: Open, Sesame!
Whitechapel Gallery, until 21 June
Passports: Great Early Buys from the British Council Collection
Whitechapel Gallery, until 14 June
Lloyd Evans wanders round Inner Temple and discovers another world in the tangle of squares
Katie Mitchell explains to Henrietta Bredin how she is creating a parallel film world with Purcell’s opera
Jon Boone says that Nato plans to get military supplies in through Tajikistan could draw the former Soviet colony into the battle as Cambodia was dragged into the Vietnam war
IF YOU ARE PLANNING A CHAMPAGNE RECEPTION and looking for some light entertainment, you can now hire London's busiest steel
BOSC LEBAT, SW France. Only 45 minutes from Toulouse Airport with daily flights from most provincial airports avoiding the horrors
PORTA METRONIA, ROME Standing high on the top of one of the seven hills of Rome- the Coelian- this unique
Spectator Business | Apollo Magazine
Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2008 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved