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In the Ploughed Field: Spring

In the Ploughed Field: Spring[a] (Russian: На пашне. Весна, romanizedNa Pashne. Vesna) is an oil painting by Russian artist Alexey Venetsianov made in the first half of the 1820s. The painting depicts an elegantly dressed peasant mother leading two horses with a harrow while also keeping an eye on her child who is seated near the furrows. It has been in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, Russia since 1893, and is regarded as one of Venetsianov's greatest works.

In the Ploughed Field: Spring
Russian: На пашне. Весна
ArtistAlexey Venetsianov
YearFirst half of 1820s
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions51.2 cm × 65.5 cm (20.2 in × 25.8 in)
LocationTretyakov Gallery, Moscow

The painting is part of Venetsianov's series depicting peasant labour. He worked on the painting in the Vyshnevolotsky Uyezd of Tver Governorate in the early 1820s. The history of the painting, starting from the 1840s, is unknown until Pavel Tretyakov purchased it for his gallery in 1893. Despite its small size, it is considered a masterpiece of the Tretyakov Gallery collection and is regarded by art historians as an integral part of Russian national culture's classical heritage.

History edit

The precise date of the creation of In the Ploughed Field: Spring is disputed. In her 1949 monograph, Russian art critic Zinaida Fomicheva suggests that the painting was created in the 1810s,[3] while Soviet art historian Aleksei Savinov [ru] suggested that the painting was created in the early 1830s in his 1955 book.[4] This ambiguity stems from Venetsianov's refusal to sign or date any of his paintings.[5] Nonetheless, modern researchers believe that In the Ploughed Field: Spring was created by Venetsianov in the first half of the 1820s, which is supported by the Tretyakov Gallery catalogue.[6]

 
At the Harvest. Summer. mid-1820s
 
Haymaking. mid-1820s

In the Ploughed Field: Spring is the first painting in Venetsianov's series of paintings depicting peasant labour, which also includes the paintings At the Harvest. Summer and Haymaking.[6][7][8] The series is sometimes referred to as the "Seasons" (spring, summer and autumn),[7] and a fourth painting representing winter is thought to exist, but no evidence of such a painting has been found.[8]

The majority of Venetsianov's peasant-themed artworks were created during his stay in the villages of Tronikha and Safonkovo in the Vyshnevolotsky Uyezd (both now part of the Venetsianovo [ru] village in the Udomelsky District of Tver Oblast). According to local historian Dmitry Podushkov [ru], who researched Venetsianov's life, he lived in Tronikha from 1819 to 1832 before moving to Safonkovo.[9] He spent the rest of his life in the Tver countryside and was at his most creative during this time.[10][9]

The painting was known by various names in the first few decades after its completion. In the 1830s, it was titled Peasant Woman in the Field, Leading Horses (Крестьянка в поле, ведущая лошадей), and in 1838, it was titled Village Woman with Horses (Деревенская женщина с лошадьми).[11][12] In 1840, it came to be known as Woman harrowing the field (Женщина, боронящая поле).[12]

The history of the painting from the 1840s to 1893 and the identities of its first owners are unknown. It is only known that Pavel Tretyakov purchased the painting in 1893.[6] Art critic Svetlana Stepanova [ru] writes: "The appearance of such a canvas as In the Ploughed Field: Spring seems to be a kind of mystery, if not a miracle. There is no mention of it either by the artist himself in his letters and autobiography or by his contemporaries. The previous owners of the painting and how Tretyakov acquired it are unknown."[12]

Subject and description edit

The canvas is both realistic and allegorical since it tries to represent an idealised image of the Russian land.[13] Venetsianov is credited with establishing Russia's naturalist school of landscape painting, which is most prominent in In the Ploughed Field: Spring.[7][14] The sky takes up the majority of the artwork, which Venetsianov carefully studied before painting in order to achieve the effect of three-dimensional clouds and their smooth flow in the artwork.[15] The horizon line in the painting runs quite low and bends even lower on the right side of the canvas. This enables the artist to create the illusion of a large open space.[14][16] Famous Russian landscape artists such as Mikhail Vrubel and Viktor Vasnetsov later imitated this technique.[14]

 
In the Ploughed Field: Spring detail

The painting's central figure is a young peasant mother leading two horses while watching over her child seated near the furrows in the lower right corner of the canvas.[7][11][17] The peasant mother is dressed elegantly in a sarafan and a kokoshnik,[18] both of which are inappropriate for agricultural work.[1] She walks across the field gracefully, barely touching the ground, as if hovering over it,[1] as if she is the goddess Flora,[16] personifying Spring;[1][19] this impression is reinforced by the fact that the woman figure appears to be proportionally larger than that of the horses.[1][18] Venetsianov did not delve into the psychological symbolism of spring in the peasant woman's face because he did not paint small details on it, but instead concentrated on the execution of the perfect plasticity of the entire portrait, melodies of rhythms, and consistency of tones, which together give rise to a feeling of sublime beauty.[20] Her body language also closely resembles a Russian folk dance due to the position of her feet and outstretched arms.[2]

Some decried Venetsianov's overly elegant and expensive clothing for a peasant woman working in the fields. This, however, was not the artist's "invention". In ancient times, the first day of ploughing was considered a holiday by Russian peasants, so they would dress up for the occasion.[16][21] Some researchers also drew parallels between the peasant woman in In the Ploughed Field: Spring and Ivan Argunov's Portrait of an Unknown Woman in Russian Costume [ru], which was created several decades earlier.[19]

The canvas's plot is not entirely idyllic. The viewer realises that the young mother only sees her child when she is passing him with horses. Figures of other ploughing peasants can be seen in the distance, to the left and right. This enables the artist to not only create the illusion of spatiality and demonstrate the scale of the field, but also to demonstrate that everyone is preoccupied with work.[11] Some silhouettes are translucent, allowing the previously painted background to shine through.[22] Uprooted stumps and other details emphasise the realism and "non-fictional" nature of the painting's landscape.[18]

Bluish tones play an important role in the colour scheme of the artwork, but rather than the usual coldness that the colour blue adds, the painting remains warm and joyful; the soft green of freshly blossoming foliage serves as an important component in making the image look warm.[23] The artist uses whitened, brightened tones in the upper, whitish-blue portion of the image, while greenish ochre colours dominate in the lower portion. Venetsianov achieved a harmonious transition of tones from intense in the foreground to calmer and calmer, fading in the zone where earth and sky meet.[24]

Reception edit

In his book The History of Russian Painting in the Nineteenth Century, the artist and critic Alexandre Benois expressed his admiration for the painting.[25]

 
In the Ploughed Field: Spring on a postage stamp of the USSR in 1955

The paintings In the Ploughed Field: Spring and At the Harvest. Summer were described as "beautiful" and "deep" by art critic Alexei Savinov,[26] who wrote that "they are distinguished by their remarkable truthfulness, the absence of conventionality in composition, colour, and characterization of images; the people depicted in them live in their own world".[27] In his opinion, Venetsianov was able to "transmit the true poetry of motherhood, to show the charm of a young mother" in In the Ploughed Field: Spring.[11] Savinov praised the artist's skill in this artwork, writing, "by the nobility of his thought, the strength of his feelings, the perfection of execution, this small painting by Venetsianov belongs to the classical heritage of national culture".[28]

According to art critic Mikhail Alpatov, In the Ploughed Field: Spring should not be regarded as a typical genre painting; rather, it should be regarded as a "picture song", not a "picture story". As a reason for this, he mentioned the elegant sarafan, the "dancing gait" of the peasant woman across a freshly ploughed field, and the ratio of her height to the size of horses.[29]

According to art historian Dmitry Sarabyanov [ru], Venetsianov "was the first to discover Russian nature (in painting)—and above all earth and sky—in natural being and immediately recognised perhaps the most significant aspects". On the one hand, the artist "develops the foreground, writing loosened earth, herbs, stones, leaves," and on the other, "the earth appears to be moving apart to infinity, going beyond the picture field, without being limited on the sides backstage". On Venetsianov's canvas, these seemingly opposing qualities are harmoniously combined, not excluding, but complementing one another.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ The painting is also sometimes translated as Ploughing, Spring[1] or In the Field: Spring[2]
  1. ^ a b c d e Gray 1999, p. 667.
  2. ^ a b Stites 2005, p. 349.
  3. ^ Фомичёва 1949, p. 65.
  4. ^ Савинов 1955, p. 144.
  5. ^ Пигарёв 1966, p. 213–214.
  6. ^ a b c Брук & Иовлева 2005, p. 73.
  7. ^ a b c d Sarabyanov 1996, p. 163.
  8. ^ a b Леонтьева 1988, p. 120.
  9. ^ a b Подушков 2013, p. 19–21.
  10. ^ Jackson 2006, p. 15.
  11. ^ a b c d Савинов 1955, p. 145.
  12. ^ a b c Степанова 2021, p. 28.
  13. ^ Королёва 2010, p. 21.
  14. ^ a b c Figes 2003, p. 118.
  15. ^ Леонтьева 1988, p. 125.
  16. ^ a b c Кожевникова 2001, p. 31.
  17. ^ Sarabyanov 1990, p. 52.
  18. ^ a b c Шумова 1978, p. 15.
  19. ^ a b Пигарёв 1966, p. 214.
  20. ^ Леонтьева 1988, p. 122.
  21. ^ Леонтьева 1988, p. 125—126.
  22. ^ Горленко, Наталья. "Фотография — ловушка для живописца. К вопросу о живописи и фотографии в России во второй половине XIX века" (PDF). Tretyakov Gallery. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  23. ^ Ткач 2002, p. 72.
  24. ^ Петинова 2001, p. 129.
  25. ^ Бенуа 1995, p. 73.
  26. ^ Савинов 1955, p. 169.
  27. ^ Савинов 1955, p. 144–145.
  28. ^ Савинов 1955, p. 146.
  29. ^ Алпатов 1967, p. 99.
  30. ^ Сарабьянов 1998, p. 168.

Literature edit

  • Алпатов, Михаил Владимирович (1967). Этюды по истории русского искусства (in Russian). Vol. 2. Moscow: Искусство.
  • Бенуа, Александр Николаевич (1995). История русской живописи в XIX веке (in Russian). Moscow: Республика. ISBN 978-5-250-02524-9.
  • Иовлева, Лидия Ивановна (2001). Shedevry GosudarstvШедевры Государственной Третьяковской галереи. Русское искусство XII — начала XX века: живопись, рисунок (in Russian). Moscow: Трилистник. ISBN 978-5-89480-033-2.
  • Кожевникова, Тамара (2001). Венецианов (in Russian). Moscow: Белый город. ISBN 978-5-7793-0248-7.
  • Королёва, С. (2010). Алексей Гаврилович Венецианов (Великие художники, том 46) (in Russian). Vol. 48. Moscow: Комсомольская правда. ISBN 978-5-7475-0023-5.
  • Леонтьева, Галина Константиновна (1988). Алексей Гаврилович Венецианов (in Russian). Leningrad: Искусство. ISBN 978-5-210-00022-4.
  • Петинова, Елена Фоминична (2001). Русские художники XVIII — начала XX века (in Russian). Saint Petersburg: Аврора. ISBN 978-5-7300-0714-7.
  • Пигарёв, Кирилл Васильевич (1966). Русская литература и изобразительное искусство (XVIII — первая четверть XIX века). Очерки (in Russian). Moscow: Наука.
  • Подушков, Дмитрий Леонидович (2013). Художник А. Г. Венецианов в Удомельском крае. Удомельские ученики (in Russian). Vyshny Volochyok: Ирида-прос.
  • Савинов, Алексей Николаевич (1955). Алексей Гаврилович Венецианов. Жизнь и творчество (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство.
  • Сарабьянов, Дмитрий Владимирович (1998). Русская живопись: пробуждение памяти (in Russian). Moscow: Искусствознание. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  • Степанова, Светлана Степановна (2021). "Поэт «простых предметов русских»". Алексей Венецианов. Пространство, свет и тишина (in Russian). Moscow: Tretyakov Gallery. pp. 8–52. ISBN 978-5-89580-340-0.
  • Ткач, Михаил Иванович (2002). Энциклопедия пейзажа (in Russian). Moscow: ОЛМА-ПРЕСС. ISBN 978-5-948-49136-3. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  • Фомичёва, Зинаида Ивановна (1949). Творчество А. Г. Венецианова в первой половине XIX века (in Russian). Leningrad: State Russian Museum.
  • Шумова, Марина Николаевна (1978). Русская живопись первой половины XIX века (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство.
  • Брук, Яков Владимирович; Иовлева, Лидия Ивановна (2005). Государственная Третьяковская галерея — каталог собрания (in Russian). Vol. 3. Moscow: СканРус. ISBN 978-5-93221-081-9.
  • Figes, Orlando (2003). Natasha's dance a cultural history of Russia. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-029796-6. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  • Sarabyanov, D. V. (1996). "Venetsianov, Aleksey". The dictionary of art. Vol. 32. New York: Grove. ISBN 978-1-884446-00-9. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  • Gray, Rosalind Polly (1999). "The Real and the Ideal in the Work of Aleksei Venetsianov". The Russian Review. 58 (4): 655–675. doi:10.1111/0036-0341.00099. ISSN 0036-0341.
  • Jackson, David (2006). The Wanderers and critical realism in nineteenth-century Russian painting. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-6434-0.
  • Sarabyanov, D. V. (1990). Russian art: from neoclassicism to the avant garde, 1800-1917: painting - sculpture - architecture. New York: H.N. Abrams. ISBN 978-0-8109-3750-5.
  • Stites, Richard (2005). Serfdom, society, and the arts in imperial Russia : the pleasure and the power. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10889-7.

External links edit

  • "На пашне. Весна" [In the Ploughed Field: Spring]. Tretyakov Gallery (in Russian).
  • "Art-каталог: живопись и графика – Венецианов Алексей Гаврилович – На пашне. Весна. Первая половина 1820–х" [Art-catalogue: paintings and drawings – Venetsianov Alexey Gavrilovich – In the Ploughed Field: Spring. First half of the 1820s]. www.art-catalog.ru (in Russian).

ploughed, field, spring, russian, На, пашне, Весна, romanized, pashne, vesna, painting, russian, artist, alexey, venetsianov, made, first, half, 1820s, painting, depicts, elegantly, dressed, peasant, mother, leading, horses, with, harrow, while, also, keeping,. In the Ploughed Field Spring a Russian Na pashne Vesna romanized Na Pashne Vesna is an oil painting by Russian artist Alexey Venetsianov made in the first half of the 1820s The painting depicts an elegantly dressed peasant mother leading two horses with a harrow while also keeping an eye on her child who is seated near the furrows It has been in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow Russia since 1893 and is regarded as one of Venetsianov s greatest works In the Ploughed Field SpringRussian Na pashne VesnaArtistAlexey VenetsianovYearFirst half of 1820sMediumOil on canvasDimensions51 2 cm 65 5 cm 20 2 in 25 8 in LocationTretyakov Gallery MoscowThe painting is part of Venetsianov s series depicting peasant labour He worked on the painting in the Vyshnevolotsky Uyezd of Tver Governorate in the early 1820s The history of the painting starting from the 1840s is unknown until Pavel Tretyakov purchased it for his gallery in 1893 Despite its small size it is considered a masterpiece of the Tretyakov Gallery collection and is regarded by art historians as an integral part of Russian national culture s classical heritage Contents 1 History 2 Subject and description 3 Reception 4 References 5 Literature 6 External linksHistory editThe precise date of the creation of In the Ploughed Field Spring is disputed In her 1949 monograph Russian art critic Zinaida Fomicheva suggests that the painting was created in the 1810s 3 while Soviet art historian Aleksei Savinov ru suggested that the painting was created in the early 1830s in his 1955 book 4 This ambiguity stems from Venetsianov s refusal to sign or date any of his paintings 5 Nonetheless modern researchers believe that In the Ploughed Field Spring was created by Venetsianov in the first half of the 1820s which is supported by the Tretyakov Gallery catalogue 6 nbsp At the Harvest Summer mid 1820s nbsp Haymaking mid 1820s In the Ploughed Field Spring is the first painting in Venetsianov s series of paintings depicting peasant labour which also includes the paintings At the Harvest Summer and Haymaking 6 7 8 The series is sometimes referred to as the Seasons spring summer and autumn 7 and a fourth painting representing winter is thought to exist but no evidence of such a painting has been found 8 The majority of Venetsianov s peasant themed artworks were created during his stay in the villages of Tronikha and Safonkovo in the Vyshnevolotsky Uyezd both now part of the Venetsianovo ru village in the Udomelsky District of Tver Oblast According to local historian Dmitry Podushkov ru who researched Venetsianov s life he lived in Tronikha from 1819 to 1832 before moving to Safonkovo 9 He spent the rest of his life in the Tver countryside and was at his most creative during this time 10 9 The painting was known by various names in the first few decades after its completion In the 1830s it was titled Peasant Woman in the Field Leading Horses Krestyanka v pole vedushaya loshadej and in 1838 it was titled Village Woman with Horses Derevenskaya zhenshina s loshadmi 11 12 In 1840 it came to be known as Woman harrowing the field Zhenshina boronyashaya pole 12 The history of the painting from the 1840s to 1893 and the identities of its first owners are unknown It is only known that Pavel Tretyakov purchased the painting in 1893 6 Art critic Svetlana Stepanova ru writes The appearance of such a canvas as In the Ploughed Field Spring seems to be a kind of mystery if not a miracle There is no mention of it either by the artist himself in his letters and autobiography or by his contemporaries The previous owners of the painting and how Tretyakov acquired it are unknown 12 Subject and description editThe canvas is both realistic and allegorical since it tries to represent an idealised image of the Russian land 13 Venetsianov is credited with establishing Russia s naturalist school of landscape painting which is most prominent in In the Ploughed Field Spring 7 14 The sky takes up the majority of the artwork which Venetsianov carefully studied before painting in order to achieve the effect of three dimensional clouds and their smooth flow in the artwork 15 The horizon line in the painting runs quite low and bends even lower on the right side of the canvas This enables the artist to create the illusion of a large open space 14 16 Famous Russian landscape artists such as Mikhail Vrubel and Viktor Vasnetsov later imitated this technique 14 nbsp In the Ploughed Field Spring detailThe painting s central figure is a young peasant mother leading two horses while watching over her child seated near the furrows in the lower right corner of the canvas 7 11 17 The peasant mother is dressed elegantly in a sarafan and a kokoshnik 18 both of which are inappropriate for agricultural work 1 She walks across the field gracefully barely touching the ground as if hovering over it 1 as if she is the goddess Flora 16 personifying Spring 1 19 this impression is reinforced by the fact that the woman figure appears to be proportionally larger than that of the horses 1 18 Venetsianov did not delve into the psychological symbolism of spring in the peasant woman s face because he did not paint small details on it but instead concentrated on the execution of the perfect plasticity of the entire portrait melodies of rhythms and consistency of tones which together give rise to a feeling of sublime beauty 20 Her body language also closely resembles a Russian folk dance due to the position of her feet and outstretched arms 2 Some decried Venetsianov s overly elegant and expensive clothing for a peasant woman working in the fields This however was not the artist s invention In ancient times the first day of ploughing was considered a holiday by Russian peasants so they would dress up for the occasion 16 21 Some researchers also drew parallels between the peasant woman in In the Ploughed Field Spring and Ivan Argunov s Portrait of an Unknown Woman in Russian Costume ru which was created several decades earlier 19 The canvas s plot is not entirely idyllic The viewer realises that the young mother only sees her child when she is passing him with horses Figures of other ploughing peasants can be seen in the distance to the left and right This enables the artist to not only create the illusion of spatiality and demonstrate the scale of the field but also to demonstrate that everyone is preoccupied with work 11 Some silhouettes are translucent allowing the previously painted background to shine through 22 Uprooted stumps and other details emphasise the realism and non fictional nature of the painting s landscape 18 Bluish tones play an important role in the colour scheme of the artwork but rather than the usual coldness that the colour blue adds the painting remains warm and joyful the soft green of freshly blossoming foliage serves as an important component in making the image look warm 23 The artist uses whitened brightened tones in the upper whitish blue portion of the image while greenish ochre colours dominate in the lower portion Venetsianov achieved a harmonious transition of tones from intense in the foreground to calmer and calmer fading in the zone where earth and sky meet 24 Reception editIn his book The History of Russian Painting in the Nineteenth Century the artist and critic Alexandre Benois expressed his admiration for the painting 25 nbsp In the Ploughed Field Spring on a postage stamp of the USSR in 1955The paintings In the Ploughed Field Spring and At the Harvest Summer were described as beautiful and deep by art critic Alexei Savinov 26 who wrote that they are distinguished by their remarkable truthfulness the absence of conventionality in composition colour and characterization of images the people depicted in them live in their own world 27 In his opinion Venetsianov was able to transmit the true poetry of motherhood to show the charm of a young mother in In the Ploughed Field Spring 11 Savinov praised the artist s skill in this artwork writing by the nobility of his thought the strength of his feelings the perfection of execution this small painting by Venetsianov belongs to the classical heritage of national culture 28 According to art critic Mikhail Alpatov In the Ploughed Field Spring should not be regarded as a typical genre painting rather it should be regarded as a picture song not a picture story As a reason for this he mentioned the elegant sarafan the dancing gait of the peasant woman across a freshly ploughed field and the ratio of her height to the size of horses 29 According to art historian Dmitry Sarabyanov ru Venetsianov was the first to discover Russian nature in painting and above all earth and sky in natural being and immediately recognised perhaps the most significant aspects On the one hand the artist develops the foreground writing loosened earth herbs stones leaves and on the other the earth appears to be moving apart to infinity going beyond the picture field without being limited on the sides backstage On Venetsianov s canvas these seemingly opposing qualities are harmoniously combined not excluding but complementing one another 30 References edit The painting is also sometimes translated as Ploughing Spring 1 or In the Field Spring 2 a b c d e Gray 1999 p 667 a b Stites 2005 p 349 Fomichyova 1949 p 65 Savinov 1955 p 144 Pigaryov 1966 p 213 214 a b c Bruk amp Iovleva 2005 p 73 a b c d Sarabyanov 1996 p 163 a b Leonteva 1988 p 120 a b Podushkov 2013 p 19 21 Jackson 2006 p 15 a b c d Savinov 1955 p 145 a b c Stepanova 2021 p 28 Korolyova 2010 p 21 a b c Figes 2003 p 118 Leonteva 1988 p 125 a b c Kozhevnikova 2001 p 31 Sarabyanov 1990 p 52 a b c Shumova 1978 p 15 a b Pigaryov 1966 p 214 Leonteva 1988 p 122 Leonteva 1988 p 125 126 Gorlenko Natalya Fotografiya lovushka dlya zhivopisca K voprosu o zhivopisi i fotografii v Rossii vo vtoroj polovine XIX veka PDF Tretyakov Gallery Retrieved 2 May 2022 Tkach 2002 p 72 Petinova 2001 p 129 Benua 1995 p 73 Savinov 1955 p 169 Savinov 1955 p 144 145 Savinov 1955 p 146 Alpatov 1967 p 99 Sarabyanov 1998 p 168 Literature editAlpatov Mihail Vladimirovich 1967 Etyudy po istorii russkogo iskusstva in Russian Vol 2 Moscow Iskusstvo Benua Aleksandr Nikolaevich 1995 Istoriya russkoj zhivopisi v XIX veke in Russian Moscow Respublika ISBN 978 5 250 02524 9 Iovleva Lidiya Ivanovna 2001 Shedevry GosudarstvShedevry Gosudarstvennoj Tretyakovskoj galerei Russkoe iskusstvo XII nachala XX veka zhivopis risunok in Russian Moscow Trilistnik ISBN 978 5 89480 033 2 Kozhevnikova Tamara 2001 Venecianov in Russian Moscow Belyj gorod ISBN 978 5 7793 0248 7 Korolyova S 2010 Aleksej Gavrilovich Venecianov Velikie hudozhniki tom 46 in Russian Vol 48 Moscow Komsomolskaya pravda ISBN 978 5 7475 0023 5 Leonteva Galina Konstantinovna 1988 Aleksej Gavrilovich Venecianov in Russian Leningrad Iskusstvo ISBN 978 5 210 00022 4 Petinova Elena Fominichna 2001 Russkie hudozhniki XVIII nachala XX veka in Russian Saint Petersburg Avrora ISBN 978 5 7300 0714 7 Pigaryov Kirill Vasilevich 1966 Russkaya literatura i izobrazitelnoe iskusstvo XVIII pervaya chetvert XIX veka Ocherki in Russian Moscow Nauka Podushkov Dmitrij Leonidovich 2013 Hudozhnik A G Venecianov v Udomelskom krae Udomelskie ucheniki in Russian Vyshny Volochyok Irida pros Savinov Aleksej Nikolaevich 1955 Aleksej Gavrilovich Venecianov Zhizn i tvorchestvo in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo Sarabyanov Dmitrij Vladimirovich 1998 Russkaya zhivopis probuzhdenie pamyati in Russian Moscow Iskusstvoznanie Retrieved 2 May 2022 Stepanova Svetlana Stepanovna 2021 Poet prostyh predmetov russkih Aleksej Venecianov Prostranstvo svet i tishina in Russian Moscow Tretyakov Gallery pp 8 52 ISBN 978 5 89580 340 0 Tkach Mihail Ivanovich 2002 Enciklopediya pejzazha in Russian Moscow OLMA PRESS ISBN 978 5 948 49136 3 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Fomichyova Zinaida Ivanovna 1949 Tvorchestvo A G Venecianova v pervoj polovine XIX veka in Russian Leningrad State Russian Museum Shumova Marina Nikolaevna 1978 Russkaya zhivopis pervoj poloviny XIX veka in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo Bruk Yakov Vladimirovich Iovleva Lidiya Ivanovna 2005 Gosudarstvennaya Tretyakovskaya galereya katalog sobraniya in Russian Vol 3 Moscow SkanRus ISBN 978 5 93221 081 9 Figes Orlando 2003 Natasha s dance a cultural history of Russia London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 029796 6 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Sarabyanov D V 1996 Venetsianov Aleksey The dictionary of art Vol 32 New York Grove ISBN 978 1 884446 00 9 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Gray Rosalind Polly 1999 The Real and the Ideal in the Work of Aleksei Venetsianov The Russian Review 58 4 655 675 doi 10 1111 0036 0341 00099 ISSN 0036 0341 Jackson David 2006 The Wanderers and critical realism in nineteenth century Russian painting Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 6434 0 Sarabyanov D V 1990 Russian art from neoclassicism to the avant garde 1800 1917 painting sculpture architecture New York H N Abrams ISBN 978 0 8109 3750 5 Stites Richard 2005 Serfdom society and the arts in imperial Russia the pleasure and the power New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10889 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to In the Ploughed Field Spring Na pashne Vesna In the Ploughed Field Spring Tretyakov Gallery in Russian Art katalog zhivopis i grafika Venecianov Aleksej Gavrilovich Na pashne Vesna Pervaya polovina 1820 h Art catalogue paintings and drawings Venetsianov Alexey Gavrilovich In the Ploughed Field Spring First half of the 1820s www art catalog ru in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title In the Ploughed Field Spring amp oldid 1161697949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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