Russia's Best Kept Secret
Russia is renowned for creating the greatest
ballet and symphony of the 20th century. Yet it is little known that
Russia has also created many of the greatest realist artists in the
world.
In 1907 Matisse visited Moscow and the Tretyakov Museum in Moscow. He saw many large paintings including “Boyarynia Morozova” by Vasily Surikov
(1887 – 120” x 231”). He asked for a ladder to examine the painting closely. Upon stepping down from the ladder he stated to the Director of the Tretyakov Museum “The Russians achieved in their large paintings what the French were only able to accomplish in their smallworks”
Fine Art Connoisseur
Magazine's Russian Art Cruise will take you to the State Russian
Museum, which houses only great Russian artists and is the best kept
secret in Russia. We will also visit the Repin Institure at the Russian Academy of Fine Art that trained the great Russian
artists, It's museum will be one of the highlights of your visit. Of course we will also visit the Hermitage Museum.
The following is an article from Lazare Gallery about Russian Art
"They served their very own understanding of perfection, beauty, and
truth. They did it faithfully, selflessly, and with the highest level of
honesty. They were people of absolute artistic integrity. This is why
their works struck the chord with the people at the time just as much as
they will forever. They left a lasting legacy."
-Alexey Steele
Ukraine Native, Surikov Graduate Art Historian
In 1863, more than a decade before Monet, Degas and Cezanne broke from
the French Academy to stage their first Impressionist exhibition in
Paris, a small group of Russian painters — in a comparably significant
act in art history — staged their own protest against the straitjacket
of heroic neoclassicism.
That year, Ivan Kramskoy (1827-1887) and 14 other young painters left
the St. Petersburg Academy of Art, founded by Catherine the Great, to
form the Peredvizhniki, or Association of Traveling Art Exhibits.
Named for their determination to display their works to non-aristocrats
unwelcome at academic exhibitions, these Wanderers or Itinerants, as
Kramskoy and his colleagues came to be known, were united by something
more profound than their desire to bring their paintings to the Russian
people.
Establishing their own cooperative workshop, called the Artel, these
artists sought to depict the Russian people themselves: serfs, artisans,
and soldiers, in their own time and place, as they actually lived their
lives.
In contrast with the Academy (whose proposed topic for its 1863 exhibit
was "The Entrance of Odin into Valhalla"), the Wanderers wished to paint
contemporary Russian scenes realistically.
Only in retrospect does their emergence seem inevitable, as this was a
time of great questioning of many aspects of Russian life. The landed
aristocracy was under attack as never before, and only two years
earlier, the country's 23 million serfs were liberated.
"They breathed new life into the realist
tradition, inspiring and mentoring the next generation of great Russian
painters."
This was a period of great ferment in the arts as well. In literature,
Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky and Turgenev probed the depths of the Russian mind
and soul, while composers such as Mussorgsky, Borodin and
Rimsky-Korsakov celebrated the Russian experience in a bold and
nationalistic idiom.
In the visual arts, the Itinerants artists cast an unflinching, yet
deeply humanistic gaze at Russia itself — its seemingly endless expanses
of forests and farms and the peasants who lived and worked on them.
Among the greatest of these painters were Ilya Repin (1844-1930) and
Vasily Surikov (1848-1916), whose names are now synonymous with the
first flowering of Russian Realism.
Before the Russian Revolution, Repin and Surikov and their lesser-known
contemporaries produced landscapes, genre paintings, historical works,
and portraits of astonishing immediacy and verisimilitude, many infused
with moral and political overtones.
Equally important, they breathed new life into the realist tradition,
inspiring and mentoring the next generation of great Russian painters.
Remaining faithful to their art throughout the uncertainties of
Stalinist rule, this new generation produced the greatest paintings of
the Soviet era — paintings whose refined quality has only recently been
recognized by the West.
It is these paintings and painters in which Lazare specializes. Over a
span of 10 years, Kathy and John Wurdeman have brought more than 2,000
paintings from Russia to this country for the first time.

N. Sergeyev 1957 Untitled
That these paintings are special is now well established. The heroic
perseverance of the men and women who painted them, however, is only
beginning to be appreciated. From the earliest days of the Artel, the
Wanderers' disdain for the official patronage of St. Petersburg's
aristocracy, and their identification with the rising middle classes,
engendered the hospitality of the authorities, who subjected them to
police surveillance and harassment.
The Russian Realists were no mere rebels against convention,
deliberately courting controversy. On the contrary, they were supremely
disciplined artists whose primary interest was their work. Arguably more
dedicated to technical mastery than the other artists of their times,
they passed along Old World standards in a highly disciplined
mentor-to-apprentice system. This system preserved the exacting
standards of the Russian Realist tradition through the Soviet era to the
present day.
Judging from the works of artists such as Gavril Gorelov (1880-1966),
Gennady Korolev (1913-1995), Alexanderliech Fomkin (1924-1999) and Yuri
Kugach (1917-present), whose paintings are displayed at Lazare Gallery,
the tradition is as strong today as it was when Kramskoy, Repin and
Surikov lived.
The Realists' artistic conservatism has never shielded them from
political persecution, however. Through periods of political harassment
and sudden swings in artistic fashion, Russian Realism's practitioners
never strayed from their vision.
"To this day, Russian Realist paintings
have never been more popular."
The Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 and the rise of artistic modernism, for
example, was a time of great crisis for the Realists. Their subjects
and their treatment of those subjects completely fell from favor.
Fashionable instead were avant-garde artists who embraced a primitivist
aesthetic that, inspired by folk art, reveled in the abstract and
non-figurative. Artists like Marc Chagall (1887-1985) and Vasily
Kandinsky (1866-1944) challenged bourgeois notions of art and culture,
rejecting Realism and representational art.
The rise of the avant-garde — represented in Russia by the so-called
Futurists — posed a political as well as artistic challenge to the
Realists. After the Russian Revolution, the Futurists proclaimed
themselves to be the true Marxist artists, dedicated to a revolt against
all allegedly bourgeois values, including artistic traditionalism.
During their heyday, the Futurists seized control of museums and art
schools. The Realists either fled the country or, when they remained in
Russia, painted in impoverished seclusion. Their schools were dissolved
by the government, and the artists themselves were denied access to
paints, brushes, canvasses and other tools of their trade. Still, they
persisted.
The Russian people, however, never embraced the Futurists, who soon fell
from favor with the government, which found them arrogant,
idiosyncratic, and unmanageable and their painting intentionally
obscure. "Painting," Stalin proclaim, in one of his few pronouncements
about art, "should be realistic in nature and Socialist in content."

M. Sokolov 1958 A Mill on the River Ozerkye
By the early 1930s, the Communist regime explicitly repudiated futurism,
Cubism and other forms of "decadent" art, proclaiming that the highly
ideological school of Socialist Realism to be the only acceptable form
of artistic expression. These governmental directives ushered in not
only a new era in the history of Russian art and culture, but also a
period in which the West had little understanding of realities behind
what would become known, after 1946, as the Iron Curtain.
Once thought to be an artistic Dark Age in the Soviet Union, the Soviet
Era was in fact one of significant cultural advancement. Eager for his
country to demonstrate cultural as well as technological development,
Stalin, beginning in the early 1930s, recognized the need for the return
of the intelligentsia, thus began subsidizing the finest art, music,
and dance schools.
The education of painters was given highest priority, and the Surikov
Institute in Moscow soon emerged as one of the greatest schools of
traditionalist art in the world. When the Nazis invaded Russia in 1941,
Stalin's government, in a move unprecedented in world history, evacuated
the most revered artists and students from the Surikov, who were sent
to safety in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.
The Lazare Gallery has been successful in collecting many works of the
most talented of these so-called "Samarkand artists." Their work has
come to be appreciated in the West in recent years. The sublime artistry
of these paintings offers a rebuttal to the unfounded belief, once
popular in the West, that the Soviet era produced only kitschy works of
the Socialist Realism school.
Some Soviet artists produced such works, it is true, but Russian Realism
survived Stalinist efforts to turn painters into propagandists. Their
survival can be traced to the courage and dedication of its painters
themselves. It has endured because these painters possess consummate
technical expertise. In a time when the flamboyantly obscure is prized
for its own sake, they have consistently produced representational art
that is immediately accessible to the viewing public and also of
transcendent beauty.

G. Korolev 1945 Pyendzkentskaya
Street
Russian Realism has endured for another reason as well. In Russia,
unlike much of Europe, the most accomplished painters deem it a great
honor to participate in the continuation of the progression of past
master artist's passing on their knowledge in art schools and
universities. There they provide intense and uncompromising training to
promising painters of the next generation.
At the greatest of these institutions — the Surikov State Academic
Institute of Art in Moscow and the Repin State Academic Institute in St.
Petersburg — graduates of four-year programs at elite preparatory
colleges undergo six years of intense, competitive, traditional
training. Since the early 1930's, there is no more exacting education
for painters.
To this day, Russian Realist paintings have never been more popular with
the Russian people, and the painters themselves enjoy greater prestige
in their homeland than doctors, lawyers, political leader and military
heroes.