Monday, February 29, 2016
Monday, February 22, 2016
Maxim Vorobiev Paintings geocoded
View of the Kremlin (by the Stone Bridge)
Painting by Maxim Vorobiev (1787-1855)
Very few of the Russian landscapes painters did work in a wider variety of settings and locales; It may be this time spent capturing many other scenes, atmospheres, and aesthetics adds extra depth to his depictions of the great landmarks of Moscow and Petersburg. These he shows with more affection than other painters whose goal was to convey the appropriate awe in the face of majesty. Vorobiev shows them as places you really might want to visit.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Alexei Savrasov Paintings in GeocodedArt
Moscow Kremlin, Cathedral Square
Painting by Alexei Savrasov (1830-1897) Though he painted at some of the seats of power in the city center, this work is typical of many he did also in the countryside of having a tragic quality: moody lighting, mystery lurking in the corners: clearly more to the story than meets the eye.
Monday, February 15, 2016
Fedor Yakovlevich Alekseev Paintings in GeoCoded Art
A View of the Moscow Kremlin and the Kamenny Bridge
Painting by Fedor Yakovlevich Alekseev (1753-1824). His works on the principal sights in Moscow reflect an official sanction to document symbols of power and their proper place in the world. He did also work in Crimea, where his images have a little more feel for what it was like to stand where he was on a particular day, when the breeze had a particular feel.
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Benjamin Paterssen Paintings in Geocoded Art
View of the Tauride Palace from the Garden
Painting by Benjamin Paterssen (1750-1815). This artist a series of paintings of the architectural highlights of Petersburg. Their lack of emotional content says something about their era and purpose: the construction of a great city, on a rational plan, was the ideal to be celebrated. A common feature (not present in this work) is the edge of a monumental building framing the image as a whole, providing context to judge distance and the scale of the buildings that are the principal subject. One of the unstated subjects though, is the wide boulevards that make the city a commodious habitation for the elegant and refined pedestrians.
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Peter Vereshchagin Paintings in GeoCodedArt
Pskov
Painting by Peter Vereshchagin (1834-1886). Though not as prolific as his brother Vasily, this artist rendered vivid images from many locations, some with famous landmarks and other more pastoral settings because they must have moved him somehow. A very common elements is a river bending to the horizon. His views are generally unremarkable in the atmosphere, though he did some hazy views of mountains in Crimea.
Monday, February 1, 2016
Konstantin Alekseyevich Korovin Paintings Geocoded
Arkhangelsk Port on Dvina
Painting by Konstantin Alekseyevich Korovin (1861–1939). This artist worked in a loose, colorful style, doing more interiors and people going about their days then landscapes. His works often seemed to be lit by a light we don't normally seem, and the objects in the scene appear to be giving off their own light. The outdoor scenes he has done are never peaceful; there is a wind blowing through everything, or else the very spinning of the Earth animated every location and gives them a dynamic appearance.
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