fbpx
Wikipedia

Léon Bakst

Léon Bakst (Russian: Леон (Лев) Николаевич Бакст, Leon (Lev) Nikolaevich Bakst) – born as Leyb-Khaim Izrailevich (later Samoylovich) Rosenberg, Лейб-Хаим Израилевич (Самойлович) Розенберг (27 January (8 February) 1866[1][2] – 28 December 1924) was a Russian painter and scene and costume designer of Jewish origin. He was a member of the Sergei Diaghilev circle and the Ballets Russes, for which he designed exotic, richly coloured sets and costumes.[3] He designed the décor for such productions as Carnaval (1910), Spectre de la rose (1911), Daphnis and Chloe (1912), The Sleeping Princess (1921) and others.[4]

Léon Bakst
Bakst's Self-portrait, 1893, oil on cardboard, 34 × 21 cm, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
Born
Leyb-Khaim Izrailevich Rosenberg

27 January 1866
Died28 December 1924 (aged 58)
Rueil-Malmaison, near Paris
NationalityBelarusian, Russian
EducationSt. Petersburg Academy of Arts
MovementModernist, Orientalist themes

Early life

Leyb-Khaim Izrailevich (later Samoylovich) Rosenberg was born in Grodno, into a middle-class Jewish family. As his grandfather was an exceptional tailor, the Tsar gave him a very good position, and he had a huge and wonderful house in Saint Petersburg.[5] Later, when Leyb's parents moved to the capital, the boy Leyb would visit his grandfather's house every Saturday. He said that he had been very impressed as a youth by that house, always returning with pleasure. At the young age of twelve, Lejb won a drawing contest and decided to become a painter. However, the parents disapproved of it and even threw away his paints.[6]

In several years the parents divorced and started new families, it became impossible to live with a step-mother, so the four siblings separated and rented their own place. As the eldest, Lejb was in charge of two sisters and brother, he 'took all kinds of painting work'. After graduating from gymnasium, he studied at the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts as a noncredit student, because he had failed the entry. He also worked part-time as a book illustrator, gaining admission into the Imperial Academy in 1883.

 
Bakst's Portrait of Alexander Benua; 1898, watercolour and pastel on paper, 65 × 100 cm, Russian Museum.

At the time of his first exhibition (1889) he took the surname of Bakst, though the origin of the pseudonym is still unclear. There are at least three versions, according to the main one, his mother's grandmother had the maiden name Bakster.[7] Alexander Benois, a life-long friend of Leon, recalled that 'Leo gave a prolonged and confusing explanation that the surname was taken after some of distant relatives'.

At the beginning of the 1890s, Bakst exhibited his works with the Society of Watercolourists.[6] From 1893 to 1897 he lived in Paris, where he studied at the Académie Julian.[8] He still often visited Saint Petersburg. After the mid-1890s, Bakst became a member of the circle of writers and artists formed by Sergei Diaghilev and Benois,[9] who in 1899 founded the influential periodical Mir iskusstva, meaning "World of Art". His graphics for this publication brought him fame.

Career

 
Carnival in Paris in Honour of the Russian Navy; c. 20th-century, oil on canvas, Central Naval Museum.

Bakst continued painting, producing portraits of Filipp Malyavin (1899), Vasily Rozanov (1901), Andrei Bely (1905), Zinaida Gippius (1906). He also worked as an art teacher for the children of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia. In 1902, he took a commission from Tsar Nicholas II to paint Admiral Avellan and Russian sailors arriving in Paris, a painting he started there, during the celebrations from the 17 to 25 October 1893. However, it took him 8 years to finish this work.

In 1898, he showed his works in the Diaghilev-organized First Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists; in World of Art exhibitions, as well as the Munich Secession, exhibitions of the Union of Russian Artists, etc. During the Russian Revolution of 1905, Bakst worked for the magazines Zhupel, Adskaya Pochta, Mir Iskusstva (magazine) [ru], and Satirikon [ru], then for an art magazine called Apollon.

Beginning in 1909, Bakst worked mostly as a stage-designer, designing sets for Greek tragedies. In 1908, he gained attention as a scene-painter for Diaghilev with the Ballets Russes. He produced scenery for Cleopatra (1909), Scheherazade (1910), Carnaval (1910), Narcisse (1911), Le Spectre de la Rose (1911), L'après-midi d'un faune (1912) and Daphnis et Chloé (1912).[10] During this time, Bakst lived in western Europe because, as a Jew, he did not have the right to live permanently outside the Pale of Settlement in the Russian Empire.

 
Terror Antiquus depicted destruction of Atlantis, Lion Gate of Mycenae, Tiryns and Acropolis of Athens, with Kore presiding over to symbolize chaos and inevitability of human force; 1908, oil on canvas, 250 × 270 cm, Russian Museum.

Despite being known for his work as a stage designer, art was also commissioned by various English families during the Art Deco era. During this time, he produced such works as the Sleeping Beauty series for James and Dorothy de Rothschild at Waddesdon Manor in 1913. The story is depicted in seven panels that line the walls of an oval, theatrical styled "Bakst room" in the Buckinghamshire manor house.[11]

During his visits to Saint Petersburg, he taught in Zvantseva's school, where one of his students was Marc Chagall (1908–1910). Bakst described Chagall as a favorite, because when told to do something, he would listen carefully, but then he would take his paint and his brushes and do something completely different from the assignment.

In 1914, Bakst was elected a member of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Bakst's comprehensive, many-sided talent showed itself in various areas — he worked as a designer of clothes, set decorations, interiors, textile, etc. Apart from a series of interior designs for the Rothschilds, he also designed exhibitions for ‘Mir Iskusstva’ society and occupied a post of a furniture and interior designer at ‘Sovremennoe Iskusstvo’ (rus. ‘Modern Art’). American silk industry businessman Arthur Selig invited Bakst to create textile design, their collaboration had great success.[11] During this period his work was widely shown in the United States. Martin Birnbaum, manager of the Berlin Photographic Company in New York City, organized an exhibition of Bakst's work in 1913 in New York that then traveled to Detroit (1913), Buffalo (1914), Cincinnati (1914), Chicago (1914) and Montreal (1914).[12]

 
Bakst in 1916

After the Revolution of 1917 Leon's sister died from hunger in Russia. When Bakst received the news, he suffered a nervous breakdown, becoming so ill that he couldn't tolerate any irritants such as light, noise, or touch. His servant, Linda, exploited his condition to steal his money — she took all the honoraria that came to the house and intimidated the artist, forcing him to include her and her husband as heirs to his will. By chance he managed to send a note to an influential friend and patron Alice Warder Garrett (1877–1952), an art philanthropist, who helped his sister Sofia rescue Leon. They first met in Paris in 1914, when Mrs. Garrett was accompanying her diplomat husband in Europe, Bakst soon depended upon Garrett as both a confidante and agent.[11]

 
One of Bakst's last paintings: Portrait of Rachel Strong, future Countess Henri de Boisgelin; 1924, oil on canvas, 130 × 89 cm, Museum of Avant-Garde Mastery.

In 1922, Bakst broke off his relationship with Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes. During this year, he visited Baltimore and, specifically Evergreen House — the residence of his American friend Alice Garrett. Garrett became Bakst's representative in the United States upon her return home in 1920, organizing two exhibitions of the artist's work at New York's Knoedler Gallery, as well as subsequent traveling shows. When in Baltimore, Bakst re-designed the dining room of Evergreen into a shocking acidic yellow and 'Chinese' red confection. The artist transformed the house's small c. 1885 gymnasium into a colourfully Modernist private theatre. This is believed to be the only extant private theatre designed by Bakst.

Léon Bakst was also a prolific writer, his literary legacy in three languages includes novels, numerous publications in magazines, critics, essays, letters to friends and colleagues.[13]

Bakst died on 27 December 1924, in a clinic in Rueil Malmaison, near Paris, from lung problems (oedema). His many admirers amongst the most famous artists of the time, poets, musicians, dancers and critiques, formed a funeral procession to accompany his body to his final resting place, in the Cimetière des Batignolles, in Paris, during a very moving ceremony.[9]

In late 2010, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London presented an exhibit of Bakst's costumes and prints.[14]

Cultural depictions

Selected works

See also

Citations

  1. ^ БАКСТ, ЛЕВ САМОЙЛОВИЧ
  2. ^ Бакст Лев Самойлович
  3. ^ Леон Бакст
  4. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1985–1993). Judge, Harry George; Toyne, Anthony (eds.). Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-19-869129-7. OCLC 11814265.
  5. ^ "Лев Бакст в десяти деталях: навстречу выставке художника в Русском музее" [10 Facts about Leon Bakst] (in Russian). Fontanka. 21 February 2016. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  6. ^ a b Elena Terkel (2008). "Leon Bakst: His family and His Art" (PDF). The Tretyakov Gallery, № 1. p. 63. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  7. ^ Usova 2016, p. 72-82.
  8. ^ Bakst
  9. ^ a b Бакст Л. С.
  10. ^ Mikotowicz, Thomas J. "Bakst, Léon". In Thomas J. Mikotowicz, Theatrical designers: An International Biographic Dictionary. New York: Greenwood, 1992. ISBN 0313262705. p. 17.
  11. ^ a b c Esaulova, A. (9 May 2016). "Штрихи к портрету: 8 историй из бурной жизни Леона Бакста" [8 Stories from Vivid Life of Leon Bakst] (in Russian). Arthive. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  12. ^ Codell, Julie," Convergences: Art History, Museums and Scholar-Agent Martin Birnbaum's Transatlantic Art for the Public," Art Markets, Agents and Collectors, eds. A. Turpin and S. Bracken. Bloomsbury, 2021, 316-327
  13. ^ Bowlt et al. 2008, p. 80-82.
  14. ^ . Vam.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 11 April 2009. Retrieved 16 May 2012.

General sources

  • Marc Chagall, My Life, St.-Petersburg, Azbuka, 2000, ISBN 5-267-00200-3
  • Codell, Julie," Convergences: Art History, Museums and Scholar-Agent Martin Birnbaum's Transatlantic Art for the Public," Art Markets, Agents and Collectors, eds. A. Turpin and S. Bracken. Bloomsbury, 2021, 316-327
  • Léon Bakst, Serov et moi en Grèce, translation and introduction by Olga Medvedkova, preface by Véronique Schiltz, TriArtis Editions, 2015, 128 p., 24 illustrations (ISBN 978-2-916724-56-0; OCLC 902790439)
  • Usova, M. N. (2016). ""Трехфамилие" Бакста: Рабинович, Розенберг, Бакст. От Лейбы Рабиновича до Леона Бакста" [Three Surnames of Leon Bakst: Rabinovich, Rosenberg, Bakst. From Leyb Rabinovich to Leon Bakst]. Journal of the Vaganova State Ballet Academy (in Russian). 5 (46): 72–82.
  • Bowlt, J. E.; Chernukhina, A.; Kovaleva, O.; Terkel, E. (2008). ""Words of Magic": The Literary heritage of Leon Bakst" (PDF). The Tretyakov Gallery (1): 80–82.

External links

  • The seven Sleeping Beauty panels at Waddesdon Manor
  • Léon Bakst at FMD  
  • W.H. Crain Costume and Scene Design Collection at the Harry Ransom Center
  • Working for Diaghilev Exhibition at the Groninger Museum
  • Léon Bakst (1866–1924) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews at wwar.com
  • An artwork by Léon Bakst at the Ben Uri site
  • Works by Léon Bakst at the Russian Art Gallery
  • Video on YouTube
  • Art Signature Dictionary - See Léon Bakst's signature, although the police seizure of counterfeit
  • at the Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Evergreen Museum and Library - Collection includes original stage sets, costume designs, and other related works.
  • Leon Bakst designs, circa 1911–1923, held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
  • Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, 1909–1929: When Art Danced with Music 2013 exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
  • Bakst collection at the McNay Art Museum

léon, bakst, russian, Леон, Лев, Николаевич, Бакст, leon, nikolaevich, bakst, born, leyb, khaim, izrailevich, later, samoylovich, rosenberg, Лейб, Хаим, Израилевич, Самойлович, Розенберг, january, february, 1866, december, 1924, russian, painter, scene, costum. Leon Bakst Russian Leon Lev Nikolaevich Bakst Leon Lev Nikolaevich Bakst born as Leyb Khaim Izrailevich later Samoylovich Rosenberg Lejb Haim Izrailevich Samojlovich Rozenberg 27 January 8 February 1866 1 2 28 December 1924 was a Russian painter and scene and costume designer of Jewish origin He was a member of the Sergei Diaghilev circle and the Ballets Russes for which he designed exotic richly coloured sets and costumes 3 He designed the decor for such productions as Carnaval 1910 Spectre de la rose 1911 Daphnis and Chloe 1912 The Sleeping Princess 1921 and others 4 Leon BakstBakst s Self portrait 1893 oil on cardboard 34 21 cm The State Russian Museum St Petersburg RussiaBornLeyb Khaim Izrailevich Rosenberg27 January 1866Grodno Russian EmpireDied28 December 1924 aged 58 Rueil Malmaison near ParisNationalityBelarusian RussianEducationSt Petersburg Academy of ArtsMovementModernist Orientalist themes Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Cultural depictions 4 Selected works 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General sources 8 External linksEarly life EditLeyb Khaim Izrailevich later Samoylovich Rosenberg was born in Grodno into a middle class Jewish family As his grandfather was an exceptional tailor the Tsar gave him a very good position and he had a huge and wonderful house in Saint Petersburg 5 Later when Leyb s parents moved to the capital the boy Leyb would visit his grandfather s house every Saturday He said that he had been very impressed as a youth by that house always returning with pleasure At the young age of twelve Lejb won a drawing contest and decided to become a painter However the parents disapproved of it and even threw away his paints 6 In several years the parents divorced and started new families it became impossible to live with a step mother so the four siblings separated and rented their own place As the eldest Lejb was in charge of two sisters and brother he took all kinds of painting work After graduating from gymnasium he studied at the St Petersburg Academy of Arts as a noncredit student because he had failed the entry He also worked part time as a book illustrator gaining admission into the Imperial Academy in 1883 Bakst s Portrait of Alexander Benua 1898 watercolour and pastel on paper 65 100 cm Russian Museum At the time of his first exhibition 1889 he took the surname of Bakst though the origin of the pseudonym is still unclear There are at least three versions according to the main one his mother s grandmother had the maiden name Bakster 7 Alexander Benois a life long friend of Leon recalled that Leo gave a prolonged and confusing explanation that the surname was taken after some of distant relatives At the beginning of the 1890s Bakst exhibited his works with the Society of Watercolourists 6 From 1893 to 1897 he lived in Paris where he studied at the Academie Julian 8 He still often visited Saint Petersburg After the mid 1890s Bakst became a member of the circle of writers and artists formed by Sergei Diaghilev and Benois 9 who in 1899 founded the influential periodical Mir iskusstva meaning World of Art His graphics for this publication brought him fame Career Edit Carnival in Paris in Honour of the Russian Navy c 20th century oil on canvas Central Naval Museum Bakst continued painting producing portraits of Filipp Malyavin 1899 Vasily Rozanov 1901 Andrei Bely 1905 Zinaida Gippius 1906 He also worked as an art teacher for the children of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia In 1902 he took a commission from Tsar Nicholas II to paint Admiral Avellan and Russian sailors arriving in Paris a painting he started there during the celebrations from the 17 to 25 October 1893 However it took him 8 years to finish this work In 1898 he showed his works in the Diaghilev organized First Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists in World of Art exhibitions as well as the Munich Secession exhibitions of the Union of Russian Artists etc During the Russian Revolution of 1905 Bakst worked for the magazines Zhupel Adskaya Pochta Mir Iskusstva magazine ru and Satirikon ru then for an art magazine called Apollon Beginning in 1909 Bakst worked mostly as a stage designer designing sets for Greek tragedies In 1908 he gained attention as a scene painter for Diaghilev with the Ballets Russes He produced scenery for Cleopatra 1909 Scheherazade 1910 Carnaval 1910 Narcisse 1911 Le Spectre de la Rose 1911 L apres midi d un faune 1912 and Daphnis et Chloe 1912 10 During this time Bakst lived in western Europe because as a Jew he did not have the right to live permanently outside the Pale of Settlement in the Russian Empire Selected stage designs For Cleopatre by Mikhail Fokine 1910 For Daphnis et Chloe by Maurice Ravel 1912 watercolour on paper 19 27 cm Houghton Library For La Pisanelle ou la Mort parfumee by Gabriele D Annunzio 1913 pencil watercolour and gouache on cardboard 24 39 cm private collection The Sleeping Beauty by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 1921 pencil and watercolour on paper 48 67 cm Thyssen Bornemisza Museum Selected costume designs For the Negro Boy in Scheherazade by Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov 1910 For the Firebird in The Firebird 1910 For The Blue God in Le Dieu bleu by Reynaldo Hahn 1911 For Josephslegende by Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Harry Graf Kessler 1914 private collection For the Masked Man in The Good Humoured Ladies by Leonide Massine 1917 For the Puppet Girl in La Boutique fantasque by Andre Derain 1919 For the Russian Peasant Woman in Old Moscow 1922 For Ida Rubinstein as Phaedra in Phedre by Racine 1923 Museum of Avant Garde Mastery Terror Antiquus depicted destruction of Atlantis Lion Gate of Mycenae Tiryns and Acropolis of Athens with Kore presiding over to symbolize chaos and inevitability of human force 1908 oil on canvas 250 270 cm Russian Museum Despite being known for his work as a stage designer art was also commissioned by various English families during the Art Deco era During this time he produced such works as the Sleeping Beauty series for James and Dorothy de Rothschild at Waddesdon Manor in 1913 The story is depicted in seven panels that line the walls of an oval theatrical styled Bakst room in the Buckinghamshire manor house 11 During his visits to Saint Petersburg he taught in Zvantseva s school where one of his students was Marc Chagall 1908 1910 Bakst described Chagall as a favorite because when told to do something he would listen carefully but then he would take his paint and his brushes and do something completely different from the assignment In 1914 Bakst was elected a member of the Imperial Academy of Arts Bakst s comprehensive many sided talent showed itself in various areas he worked as a designer of clothes set decorations interiors textile etc Apart from a series of interior designs for the Rothschilds he also designed exhibitions for Mir Iskusstva society and occupied a post of a furniture and interior designer at Sovremennoe Iskusstvo rus Modern Art American silk industry businessman Arthur Selig invited Bakst to create textile design their collaboration had great success 11 During this period his work was widely shown in the United States Martin Birnbaum manager of the Berlin Photographic Company in New York City organized an exhibition of Bakst s work in 1913 in New York that then traveled to Detroit 1913 Buffalo 1914 Cincinnati 1914 Chicago 1914 and Montreal 1914 12 Bakst in 1916 After the Revolution of 1917 Leon s sister died from hunger in Russia When Bakst received the news he suffered a nervous breakdown becoming so ill that he couldn t tolerate any irritants such as light noise or touch His servant Linda exploited his condition to steal his money she took all the honoraria that came to the house and intimidated the artist forcing him to include her and her husband as heirs to his will By chance he managed to send a note to an influential friend and patron Alice Warder Garrett 1877 1952 an art philanthropist who helped his sister Sofia rescue Leon They first met in Paris in 1914 when Mrs Garrett was accompanying her diplomat husband in Europe Bakst soon depended upon Garrett as both a confidante and agent 11 One of Bakst s last paintings Portrait of Rachel Strong future Countess Henri de Boisgelin 1924 oil on canvas 130 89 cm Museum of Avant Garde Mastery In 1922 Bakst broke off his relationship with Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes During this year he visited Baltimore and specifically Evergreen House the residence of his American friend Alice Garrett Garrett became Bakst s representative in the United States upon her return home in 1920 organizing two exhibitions of the artist s work at New York s Knoedler Gallery as well as subsequent traveling shows When in Baltimore Bakst re designed the dining room of Evergreen into a shocking acidic yellow and Chinese red confection The artist transformed the house s small c 1885 gymnasium into a colourfully Modernist private theatre This is believed to be the only extant private theatre designed by Bakst Leon Bakst was also a prolific writer his literary legacy in three languages includes novels numerous publications in magazines critics essays letters to friends and colleagues 13 Bakst died on 27 December 1924 in a clinic in Rueil Malmaison near Paris from lung problems oedema His many admirers amongst the most famous artists of the time poets musicians dancers and critiques formed a funeral procession to accompany his body to his final resting place in the Cimetiere des Batignolles in Paris during a very moving ceremony 9 In late 2010 the Victoria and Albert Museum in London presented an exhibit of Bakst s costumes and prints 14 Cultural depictions EditAnna Pavlova film by Emil Loteanu portrayed by Igor Dmitriev 1983 Selected works Edit Dinner 1902 oil on canvas 150 100 cm Russian Museum Stage furniture design for Le Spectre de la rose by Michel Fokine c 1911 Poster for Afternoon of a Faun 1912 private collection Drawing of a Horse Drinking c early 20th century pencil watercolour and gouache on paper laid on cardboard 33 49 cm private collection Textile Print c 1922 Stamp for the 150th Anniversary of Birth of Leon Bakst 2016 Belposhta The Sleeping Beauty series 1913 22 oil on canvas Waddesdon Manor The Bad Fairy Visits the Christening 212 84 cm The Good Fairy s Promise 210 140 cm The Princess Pricks Her Finger on a Spinning Wheel 213 143 cm The Aged King Pleads with the Good Fairy 212 143 cm The Princess and the Court Fall Asleep for a Hundred Years 212 171 cm The Prince Out Hunting Sees the Castle Where the Princess Lies Sleeping 212 142 cm The Prince Discovers the Princess and Wakes Her with a Kiss 212 84 cmSee also EditList of Orientalist artists Orientalism Place des Etats UnisCitations Edit BAKST LEV SAMOJLOVICh Bakst Lev Samojlovich Leon Bakst Norwich John Julius 1985 1993 Judge Harry George Toyne Anthony eds Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia Oxford England Oxford University Press p 29 ISBN 0 19 869129 7 OCLC 11814265 Lev Bakst v desyati detalyah navstrechu vystavke hudozhnika v Russkom muzee 10 Facts about Leon Bakst in Russian Fontanka 21 February 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2020 a b Elena Terkel 2008 Leon Bakst His family and His Art PDF The Tretyakov Gallery 1 p 63 Retrieved 3 May 2017 Usova 2016 p 72 82 Bakst a b Bakst L S Mikotowicz Thomas J Bakst Leon In Thomas J Mikotowicz Theatrical designers An International Biographic Dictionary New York Greenwood 1992 ISBN 0313262705 p 17 a b c Esaulova A 9 May 2016 Shtrihi k portretu 8 istorij iz burnoj zhizni Leona Baksta 8 Stories from Vivid Life of Leon Bakst in Russian Arthive Retrieved 10 December 2020 Codell Julie Convergences Art History Museums and Scholar Agent Martin Birnbaum s Transatlantic Art for the Public Art Markets Agents and Collectors eds A Turpin and S Bracken Bloomsbury 2021 316 327 Bowlt et al 2008 p 80 82 Biography of Leon Bakst Victoria and Albert Museum Vam ac uk Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 16 May 2012 General sources EditMarc Chagall My Life St Petersburg Azbuka 2000 ISBN 5 267 00200 3 Codell Julie Convergences Art History Museums and Scholar Agent Martin Birnbaum s Transatlantic Art for the Public Art Markets Agents and Collectors eds A Turpin and S Bracken Bloomsbury 2021 316 327 Leon Bakst Serov et moi en Grece translation and introduction by Olga Medvedkova preface by Veronique Schiltz TriArtis Editions 2015 128 p 24 illustrations ISBN 978 2 916724 56 0 OCLC 902790439 Usova M N 2016 Trehfamilie Baksta Rabinovich Rozenberg Bakst Ot Lejby Rabinovicha do Leona Baksta Three Surnames of Leon Bakst Rabinovich Rosenberg Bakst From Leyb Rabinovich to Leon Bakst Journal of the Vaganova State Ballet Academy in Russian 5 46 72 82 Bowlt J E Chernukhina A Kovaleva O Terkel E 2008 Words of Magic The Literary heritage of Leon Bakst PDF The Tretyakov Gallery 1 80 82 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leon Bakst The seven Sleeping Beauty panels at Waddesdon Manor Leon Bakst at FMD W H Crain Costume and Scene Design Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Working for Diaghilev Exhibition at the Groninger Museum Leon Bakst 1866 1924 Artwork Images Exhibitions Reviews at wwar com An artwork by Leon Bakst at the Ben Uri site Works by Leon Bakst at the Russian Art Gallery Video on YouTube Art Signature Dictionary See Leon Bakst s signature although the police seizure of counterfeit Bakst theatre and performance collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum Evergreen Museum and Library Collection includes original stage sets costume designs and other related works Leon Bakst designs circa 1911 1923 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes 1909 1929 When Art Danced with Music 2013 exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C Bakst collection at the McNay Art Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leon Bakst amp oldid 1132325607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.