Landscape with Injured Soldier
Landscape with Injured Soldier

Andronov, Nikolai

1929 - 1998

Landscape with Injured Soldier

Oil on board

105 x 117cm

1963 - 1995

Signed lower right and inscribed on reverse


 

PROVENANCE:

Collection of the artist and by descent


EXHIBITED:

The Museum of Architecture in Moscow (MUAR), ‘Russia Andronova,’ June 2009, dedicated to the 80th anniversary of Andronov, listed as No. 8.

Nikolai Andronov and Natalya Egorshina, Otkriti Club, Moscow, March 2012, Catalogue, p. 14, illustrated.


 Andronov portrait

Nikolai Andronov in his Moscow studio circa 1970

Landscape with Invalid is an important large-scale masterpiece by the leading post-war ‘Severe Style’ Moscow artist, Nikolai Andronov.  Andronov was born in Moscow in 1929 and graduated from the Surikov institute in 1954.  Stalin’s death on March 5, 1953 marked the beginning of a new direction for Soviet painting and the emergence of a new style known today as the ‘Severe Style’ or the ‘Severe School’ of which Andronov was a founding member.  Nikita Khrushchev came to power and delivered his so-called ‘Secret Speech,’ in which he denounced Stalin’s cult of personality and the brutality of his reign.  This instigated the period now known as the ‘thaw’ that allowed increased freedoms in many areas of Soviet life including artistic production.

In the early 1950’s and after Stalin’s death and the ‘thaw,’ exhibitions of Western art came to Russia for the first time including shows of international contemporary art, Picasso and Abstract Expressionism.  Nikolai Andronov, along with artists such as Geli KorzhevViktor PopkovPavel Nikonov, Pyotr Ossovski, Victor Ivanov and Tair Salahov rejected the happy cheerful subject matter of Socialist Realism and drew upon Soviet art of the 1920’s for inspiration and created the ‘Severe Style.’  They abandoned the polished classical style that was fashionable at the time and practised by artists such as Aleksandr Laktianov and presented a subject matter that they felt better reflected the grim austerity of post war Russia.  Monumental paintings by AndronovKorzhevPopkov and Salahov used subjects drawn from daily life with simplified form, colour and a dramatic cinematic manner.

 Andronov Raftsman

Raftsman, 1961, Nikolai AndronovTretyakov gallery.

Andronov’s paintings are characterized by: - a sense of truthfulness, grittiness and aloofness. The paintings are often on a large scale which led to the ‘Severe Style’s’ alternative name of MonumentalismAndronov utilized a simple palette of muddied greys, browns and earth tones often making his own colours by necessity when in the villages in the far north of Russia.

The artist travelled around Russia drawing his subject matter from the reality he encountered.  He admired the leading 1930’s artists such as Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, Alexander Deinika and Yuri Pimenov and the Italian Neo-Realist cinema.  The polished perfection of the artists of the early 1950’s was replaced with broad brush strokes and a sketchy rough quality.

Andronov started his art studies at a young age at the Intermediate Art School, later finishing his studies at both the Repin Institute (1948-1952) and the Surikov Institute (1952-1954). He began exhibiting his art in Moscow in 1951, where he became a member of Group of Eight, a political activist group. He specialized in thematic paintings, portraits and landscapes. 

 Andonov’s most well-known works include Builders of Kuibyshev Hydroelectric Power-Station (1957) and A Rigger (1959). The Assembler (1958), and Raftsmen, (1961) became definitive works of the Severe style. Later in his life, Andronov would find inspiration in Ferapontovo on the Little Volga where he worked in a summer studio. The paintings of this period, including this powerful work, Landscape with invalid, show the dynamic, harsh, tense reality of the Russian north.

 In the 60s and 70s, Andronov worked mainly as a muralist painter designing

huge murals and mosaics, such as Man and Printing (1978) for which he was awarded the USSR State Prize in 1979. Moving into the 1980s and 1990s, political motivations gave way to more spiritual impulses, shifting the themes of his paintings more toward religious cultural heritage and spiritual self-examination. Andronov continued painting up until the very last year of his life.

 

Other famous paintings of this school are Pavel Nikonov’s Geologists of 1962 and Viktor Popkov’s Memories, Widows of 1962 and Victor Ivanov’s Funeral of 1971.  

 

 Nikonov Geologists

Pavel NikonovGeologists, 1969, oil on canvas, 182 x 225cm.

The Tretyakov Gallery in Krymski Val now has two rooms dedicated to this period where masterpieces by PopkovKorzhevAndronovNikonov and Ivanov can be seen. 

 Popkov Memories

Viktor PopkovMemories, Widows,’ 1962, oil on canvas, 160 x 234cm.

 Ivanov Funeral

Victor IvanovFuneral, 1971, oil on canvas, 153 x 218cm

Nikolai Andronov’s Landscape with Invalid.

Andronov delighted in capturing the landscapes he encountered on his numerous travels around the far north of Russia.  He often includes dogs or horses and this painting has a horse and cart at its centre.  An old soldier, injured in the war and a common sight in post war Russian villages, moves slowly towards the viewer on crutches.  The village is probably Vologda Ferapontov, the Monastery village Andronov visited most summers from the 1960’s.  The houses are the most basic of fisherman’s wooden shacks.  The palate is reduced to a few basic blues, greys and browns and Andronov excludes all unnecessary details and colour.  It is clear he is delighted with the elemental landscape and the simplicity of the life of the fisherman in the far north of Russia carving out the most basic of existences.

Screen shot 2013-12-28 at 9.42.51 PM

List of exhibited paintings in 2009 Andronov exhibition at Museum of Architecture in Moscow with Landscape with Invalid listed at No. 8.

Paintings by Andronov are well represented in Russian museums with examples in: - The Tretyakov Gallery, The Russian Museum, The Museums of Fine Art in Omsk and Arkhangelsk, The Abramtsevo Estate, Rostov, Novgorod, Vologda, Kiev, and many museums in Germany and Eastern Europe.

 


 

   


 

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