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They Did Not Expect Him

They Did Not Expect Him is a painting by realist artist Ilya Repin made between 1884 and 1888. It depicts the return of a narodnik from exile and his family's reaction. The painting is part of Repin's "Narodniki" series, which includes four other artworks.

They Did Not Expect Him
Russian: Не ждали
ArtistIlya Repin
Year1884–1888
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions160.5 cm × 167.5 cm (63.2 in × 65.9 in)
LocationTretyakov Gallery, Moscow

Repin began working on early versions of the canvas in 1884, at his country house in Martyshkino. He displayed it the same year in the 12th travelling exhibition of the Peredvizhniki, a group of Russian realist artists who travelled around Russia to host art exhibitions, first in Saint-Petersburg and then in other cities of Russia. It was purchased by Pavel Tretyakov in 1885 for display in his gallery. However, Repin continued to work on the painting after it was purchased, making several changes in 1885, 1887 and 1888, primarily to the face of the man entering the room.

Russian artist and art critic Igor Grabar wrote that the paintings They Did Not Expect Him and Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan became the pinnacles of Repin's career, while art historian Dmitry Sarabyanov [ru] described the painting as "one of the pinnacles of Russian art in the nineteenth century". Art scholar Aleksei Fedorov-Davydov called They Did Not Expect Him "the most significant and monumental" of the artist's works on revolutionary themes.

History edit

Background edit

Ilya Repin completed his seven years of study at the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1871,[1] and was awarded the Grand Gold Medal of the academy for the painting "The Resurrection of the Daughter of Jairus", as well as the title of class artist of the first degree and the right to a fellowship trip abroad. From 1873 to 1876, the artist lived and worked in France.[2]

Repin returned from Paris to St. Petersburg in July 1876[3] and later went back to his hometown of Chuguev where he stayed until September 1877.[4] He then returned to Moscow,[5] where he would live and work for the next five years. Repin began working on the theme of procession in 1877. His main work on this theme, "Religious Procession in Kursk Governorate", was begun in 1880 in Moscow, and completed in 1883 in St. Petersburg, where the artist moved in September 1882.[6] Repin wrote to art critic Vladimir Stasov in a letter dated 2 January 1881:[7]

... I will move to St. Petersburg and begin the paintings I have long conceived from the most burning reality that surrounds us, understandable to us and exciting us more than all past events.

In the early 1880s, Repin was greatly influenced by the assassination of Emperor Alexander II by Pervomartovtsy, literally meaning those of March 1, as well as by the public execution of the assassins, which he attended.[8][9] In the mid-late 1870s, Repin conceived the idea of creating a series of paintings on the theme of Narodism, a political movement of the Russian intelligentsia in the 1870s. The first of the "Narodniki" series is the painting Under Escort. On the Muddy Road (Под конвоем. По грязной дороге; 1876), followed by Arrest of a Propagandist (Арест пропагандиста; 1880–1889), Before Confession (Перед исповедью; 1879–1885) and Meeting (Сходка; 1883).[10][11][12]

The 11th travelling exhibition, which featured Repin's Religious Procession in the Kursk Province and several other works, opened in St. Petersburg in March 1883.[13] Ilya Repin and Vladimir Stasov travelled to Europe in the second half of May of that year, visiting Berlin, Dresden, Munich, Paris, Madrid, Venice, and several cities in the Netherlands.[14] In early June, Repin returned to St. Petersburg, and later settled in the dacha village of Martyshkino near Oranienbaum.[15]

Creation edit

 
First version of They Did Not Expect Him (1883)

There are two different versions of They Did Not Expect Him. Repin began work on the first one in 1883, depicting a student's return to her family. This oil on wood painting has a relatively small format, 45.8 × 37 cm.[16][17] Fifteen years later, in 1898, Repin reworked this version, making several changes to the figure of the young woman,[18] whose face was reminiscent of his daughter Nadia.[19] It is currently in the Tretyakov Gallery's collection. [16]

 
Sketch for They Did Not Expect Him (1884)

In his 1948 article titled "New Pages of Repin's Creative Biography", art historian Ilya Zilberstein [ru] discussed the first version of They Did Not Expect Him. According to him, the painting was intended to feature a young girl as the main character. Her revolutionary attire was strikingly similar to that of The Student [ru] in Nikolai Yaroshenko's painting, as both heroines wore plaid with a small cap on their heads. According to Ilya Zilberstein, when Repin saw The Student and read the press reviews, he decided to replace the character of the young girl in the second version of his painting with that of a young man.[20]

Repin began painting a second version, which would become the main one, in 1884. It was much larger, and the woman who had entered the room had been replaced by a man. The painter worked on it in his country house in Martyshkino, near Saint Petersburg, and posed for it with members of his family and acquaintances.[21] The model for the exile's mother is thus partly Vera Alexeievna, Repin's wife, and partly Varvara Komarova [ru], Stasov's daughter; that of the child, Sergei Kostytchev [ru], the son of a neighbour, who would later be a renowned biochemist, professor, and academician; that of the young girl, Vera Repina, the painter's eldest daughter; and that of the maid, an employee of the Repins.[22][23][24] The man entering the room is thought to be Vsevolod Garshin, whose portrait Repin worked on in 1884. The resemblance to the writer is complete in an intermediate version of the painting.[25][26][27]

The father of the exile is also depicted in the early sketches, notifying everyone else of his impending arrival. The critic Vladimir Stasov also mentions the silhouette of "an old man". Repin left only the characters who, in his opinion, were necessary for the psychological development of the theme he had chosen and for the "coherence of the scenic action" in the final version.[22]

12th traveling exhibition and sale of the painting edit

The painting was included in the 12th itinerant exhibition of the Peredvizhniki, which was then in Saint-Petersburg, beginning in 1884. Pavel Tretyakov had decided not to buy the painting[27] after telling Repin that it had many qualities but also flaws; its subject did not interest him, but it seemed to him that it would touch the public.[28] Repin himself was also not entirely satisfied with the painting's visual treatment of the theme of exile's return.[29] They Did Not Expect Him then travelled to various cities throughout Russia with the travelling exhibition.[28] Pavel Tretyakov informed Repin at the end of the trip that he had decided to purchase the canvas. Repin had also received another offer from Fyodor Tereshchenko [ru], but turned it down because he wanted to retouch the male character. When the painting was finished, Pavel Tretyakov was able to acquire it for his collection, raising the purchase price from 5,000 to 7,000 rubles.[27]

Repin returned to the painting in 1885, 1887, and 1888. The changes he made were mostly to the expression on the exiled man's face. Andrey Denyer photographed the canvas before the 1885 modifications, and offered the photograph to art critic Vladimir Stasov in 1884.[16]

Analysis edit

Subject edit

The canvas depicts the moment when a man enters a room. He is an exile, most likely a member of the Narodnaya Volya, a Russian revolutionary political organisation founded in the nineteenth century, who has returned from a remote region of Russia. Those in the room, who appear to be his family, were surprised to see him.

Repin expresses the full range of their emotions, in all of their diversity, and in the moment they are created. There is the hesitant joy of the woman seated at the piano, the exiled man's wife, and that of the boy seated at the table, the young girl who looks to the side, probably unaware of who the man is, the wary astonishment of the maid standing in the entrance, the middle-aged woman in the foreground — his mother, whose bent figure expresses profound upheaval.[30][31]

Composition edit

The man's emotion is also palpable. Repin painted and changed his facial expression and head inclination at least three times. Repin had to choose a head inclination position between the elevation of the hero and the lassitude of the martyr, and he eventually retained a questioning and uncertain expression, where there is also heroism and suffering.[22]

The pictorial composition revolves around the exile and his mother, as well as their exchange of gazes. The mother is the link that connects her son, who is still a stranger in this luminous interior, to the rest of the family. The movement she makes towards him is highlighted in the painting by the chair she pushes aside.[22][29] The painting's centre is occupied by her hand and that of her daughter-in-law, who is seated at the piano.[22]

The secondary characters, such as the child seated at the table in the right part of the painting, give the painting life, consistency, and a lyrical warmth. Other details contribute to this, such as the little girl's posture with her unusually curved legs, and the sensitively painted furnishings of an apartment typical of a family of the intelligentsia at the time.[22]

Symbolism edit

Repin emphasises the political and spiritual dimensions of a return following a conviction for revolutionary activity. This return would have been considered "an unexpected and miraculous event" and even a "resurrection" during this period of history, when long sentences were common. The mother rising from her armchair to meet her son is reminiscent of how scenes from the Gospels, such as the resurrection of Lazarus or the Last Supper at Emmaus, are depicted. It is also similar to Alexander Ivanov's painting The Appearance of Christ Before the People,[32] and it establishes a link with the theme of guilt, the prodigal son's return.[29]

The apartment's wall is covered with reproductions that support the painting's political and moral symbolism. These are portraits of democratic writers Nikolay Nekrasov and Taras Shevchenko, a Christ on Golgotha, a symbol of suffering and atonement, and a revolutionary intellectual. There is also a depiction of Emperor Alexander II on his deathbed, having been murdered by the Narodniki.[19][29]

The painting is full of surprises stylistically: the side lighting, the perspective, the door frame and the window in a row, the set of frames recall Dutch painters. The colours are very well mixed, "the blues are mixed with green, the browns with greys and purples, the reds are purplish".[33]

Reception edit

They Did Not Expect Him was praised by critic as a "masterpiece of the Russian art school".[19] He stated:[34]

They Did Not Expect Him by Repin exhibition's most talented and remarkable work. It contains a great deal of depth and the expression of a brilliant thought. It reflects our time without blushing or hypocrisy, and the public appreciated and loved it for that.

The painting received a mixed reaction from painter and critic Alexandre Benois. He considers the artificial staging, grimacing characters, and a primary narration to be the painting's weaknesses in his book "History of Russian Painting in the Nineteenth Century": "the gaze passes from a bombastic melodrama to rather superficial characters, but stops with pleasure on an interior treated to perfection, of a grey full of force, and of a lively and simple painting."[35]

The painting was dubbed "the most significant and monumental" of the artist's works on revolutionary themes by art critic Aleksei Fedorov-Davydov.[22] In his book on Repin, he writes:[22][18]

They Did Not Expect Him is an outstanding canvas by Repin for its beauty and mastery of pictorial choices. It is painted in full light on the motif, and its luminous colorism communicates a soft and clear lyricism that softens the drama it represents... The painter advances genre and historical painting by locating and depicting contemporary heroes. Or, more precisely, he causes them to reach a specific force, paving the way for a painting of contemporary history.

Alain Besançon, a French historian, regards the painting exemplary for the connection it creates between painting and literature:[33]

Repin's skill is bringing together, on the stage suggested by classical perspective, the elements of a drama that are advanced sequentially on a real theatrical stage or in a novel and which are presented simultaneously here. The eye can browse these messages, which are conveyed in traditional painting through the militant's peasant clothing, the tottering pose of the old lady, the expressions on the faces, and the mute participation of Nekrassov and Shevchenko.

The artist and art critic Igor Grabar wrote that the paintings They Did Not Expect Him and Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan became "the highest points in Repin's career both in terms of the power of expression and pictorial power". According to him, no other Repin painting could ever top these two.[36] Similarly, art critic Dmitry Sarabyanov [ru] regarded They Did Not Expect Him as "one of the pinnacles of Russian painting of the 19th century".[37]

Legacy edit

The painting was featured on a Soviet postage stamp released in 1969.

They Did Not Expect Him was displayed at the Repin exhibition at Paris's Petit Palais from 5 October 2021 to 23 January 2022.[38]

 
Soviet post stamp (1969)

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ . Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2 April 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  2. ^ Брук & Иовлева 2006, p. 167.
  3. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 169.
  4. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 176.
  5. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 186.
  6. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 245.
  7. ^ Переписка с В. В. Стасовым, 1877—1894. "НЭБ – Национальная электронная библиотека". rusneb.ru. from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved 11 April 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Г. Ю. Стернин; Е. В. Кириллина (1996). Илья Репин (1844—1930) (in Russian) (Orig.-ausg ed.). Saint-Petersburg: Аврора. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-85995-211-5.
  9. ^ Lyaskovskaya, Olga (1953). "К истории создания картины И. Е. Репина «Иван Грозный и сын его Иван 16 ноября 1581 года»". Илья Ефимович Репин [Ilya Yefimovich Repin] (in Russian). Moscow. from the original on 18 November 2021. Retrieved 18 November 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ Т. В. Юденкова (1998). "Картина И. Е. Репина «Не ждали». Художественное самосознание общества 1880–х годов" [Painting by I. E. Repin 'They Did Not Expect Him.' Artistic self-consciousness of society in the 1880s]. Искусствознание (in Russian) (2): 376–407.
  11. ^ Alexandrova, Natalya; Nikonova, Natalya; Vvedenskaya, Elena (2010). Герои и злодеи русской истории в искусстве XVIII — XX веков [Heroes and criminals in the history of Russian art from the 18th to the 20th century] (in Russian). Saint Petersburg. p. 95. ISBN 978-5-93332-355-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ "Илья Репин. Галерея картин и рисунков художника - Иван Грозный и сын его Иван 16 ноября 1581 года, 1885" [Ilya Repin. Gallery of paintings and drawings of the artist – Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan November 16, 1581, 1885]. ilya-repin.ru (in Russian). from the original on 18 August 2011. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  13. ^ Королёва 2010, p. 20.
  14. ^ Лясковская 1982, pp. 202–212.
  15. ^ Лясковская 1982, p. 212.
  16. ^ a b c Брук & Иовлева 2006, pp. 217–218.
  17. ^ "Репин Илья Ефимович — Не ждали, 1883—1898" [Repin Ilya Efimovich – They Did Not Expect Him, 1883–1898]. www.art-catalog.ru (in Russian). from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  18. ^ a b А. A. Фёдоров-Давыдов. . Российский общеобразовательный портал (in Russian). Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  19. ^ a b c Евстратова, Е. H. (2008). Репин [Repin] (in Russian). Moscow: ОЛМА Медиа Групп. pp. 72–75. ISBN 978-5-37300-683-5. from the original on 11 April 2022. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  20. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 8.
  21. ^ Королёва 2010.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h А. А. Фёдоров-Давыдов (1989). И. Е. Репин [I. E. Repin] (in Russian). Moscou: Искусство (издательство). pp. 68–70. ISBN 978-5-98724-030-4.
  23. ^ А. И. Леонов (1971). Русское искусство: очерки о жизни и творчестве художников [Russian art: elements on the life and work of painters] (in Russian). Vol. 2. Moscow: Искусство (издательство). p. 20.
  24. ^ Н. to. Машковцев (1943). И. Е. Репин: краткий очерк жизни и творчества (1844—1930) [I. E. Repin: a brief sketch of life and work (1844-1930)] (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство (издательство). p. 67.
  25. ^ А. A. Парамонов (1952). Иллюстрации И. E. Репина (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство (издательство). p. 144.
  26. ^ Elizabeth Kridl Valkenier. (PDF). Metropolitan Museum of Art. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2019.
  27. ^ a b c Юденкова, Татьяна. [Collection of the Tretyakov Gallery: Painting by Ilya Repin "They Did Not Expect Him"]. Эхо Москвы (in Russian). Archived from the original on 3 March 2022.
  28. ^ a b Татьяна Юденкова. [Relentless service (On the history of the collection of P.M. Tretyakov)]. www.nasledie-rus.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 20 February 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  29. ^ a b c d Т. В. Юденкова (2010). . Художник (in Russian). Archived from the original on 22 September 2015.
  30. ^ [Ilya Efimovich Repin – They Did Not Expect Him]. Tretyakov Gallery (in Russian). Archived from the original on 16 May 2017.
  31. ^ "Илья Репин. Галерея картин и рисунков художника — Не ждали, 1884" [Ilya Repin. Gallery of paintings and drawings of the artist – They Did Not Expect Him, 1884]. ilya-repin.ru (in Russian). from the original on 12 March 2013. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  32. ^ Е. Алленова (2000). Илья Репин [Ilya Repin] (in Russian). Moscow: Белый город. p. 63. ISBN 978-5-7793-0220-3.
  33. ^ a b Alain Besançon (1962). "A big problem: the dissidence of Russian painting (1860–1922)". Annals. History, Social Sciences (in French). 17 (2). doi:10.3406/ahess.1962.420817. S2CID 161156519. from the original on 25 March 2022. Retrieved 12 April 2022.
  34. ^ В. В. Стасов (1950). Избранное: живопись, скульптура, графика [Favorites: painting, sculpture, graphics] (in Russian). Vol. 1. Искусство.
  35. ^ Бенуа, А. H. (1995). История русской живописи в XIX веке [History of Russian painting in the 19th century] (in Russian). Moscow: Республика. pp. 267, 272. ISBN 978-5-250-02524-9.
  36. ^ Grabar 1948, p. 285.
  37. ^ Сарабьянов 1955, p. 193.
  38. ^ "Ilya Répine (1844–1930)". Petit Palais (in French). 18 June 2021. from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved 11 April 2022.

General and cited references edit

  • Брук, Я. В.; Иовлева, Л. И. (2006). Государственная Третьяковская галерея — каталог собрания [State Tretyakov Gallery – collection catalog] (in Russian). Vol. 4. Moscow: Красная площадь. ISBN 978-5-93221-081-9.
  • Grabar, Igor (1948). Репин [Repin] (in Russian). Vol. 1. Moscow: Издательство Академии наук СССР.
  • Королёва, С. (2010). Илья Ефимович Репин (Великие художники, том 20) [Ilya Efimovich Repin (Great Artists, Volume 20)] (in Russian). Vol. 20. Moscow: Директ-Медиа и Комсомольская правда. ISBN 978-5-87107-193-9.
  • Лясковская, О. А. (1982). Илья Ефимович Репин. Жизнь и творчество [Ilya Efimovich Repin. Life and art] (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство.
  • Сарабьянов, Дмитрий Владимирович (1955). Народно-освободительные идеи русской живописи второй половины XIX века [People's liberation ideas of Russian painting in the second half of the 19th century] (in Russian). Moscow: Искусство.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ne zhdali at Wikimedia Commons

they, expect, painting, realist, artist, ilya, repin, made, between, 1884, 1888, depicts, return, narodnik, from, exile, family, reaction, painting, part, repin, narodniki, series, which, includes, four, other, artworks, russian, Не, ждалиartistilya, repinyear. They Did Not Expect Him is a painting by realist artist Ilya Repin made between 1884 and 1888 It depicts the return of a narodnik from exile and his family s reaction The painting is part of Repin s Narodniki series which includes four other artworks They Did Not Expect HimRussian Ne zhdaliArtistIlya RepinYear1884 1888MediumOil on canvasDimensions160 5 cm 167 5 cm 63 2 in 65 9 in LocationTretyakov Gallery MoscowRepin began working on early versions of the canvas in 1884 at his country house in Martyshkino He displayed it the same year in the 12th travelling exhibition of the Peredvizhniki a group of Russian realist artists who travelled around Russia to host art exhibitions first in Saint Petersburg and then in other cities of Russia It was purchased by Pavel Tretyakov in 1885 for display in his gallery However Repin continued to work on the painting after it was purchased making several changes in 1885 1887 and 1888 primarily to the face of the man entering the room Russian artist and art critic Igor Grabar wrote that the paintings They Did Not Expect Him and Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan became the pinnacles of Repin s career while art historian Dmitry Sarabyanov ru described the painting as one of the pinnacles of Russian art in the nineteenth century Art scholar Aleksei Fedorov Davydov called They Did Not Expect Him the most significant and monumental of the artist s works on revolutionary themes Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Creation 1 3 12th traveling exhibition and sale of the painting 2 Analysis 2 1 Subject 2 2 Composition 2 3 Symbolism 3 Reception 4 Legacy 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 General and cited references 6 External linksHistory editBackground edit Ilya Repin completed his seven years of study at the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1871 1 and was awarded the Grand Gold Medal of the academy for the painting The Resurrection of the Daughter of Jairus as well as the title of class artist of the first degree and the right to a fellowship trip abroad From 1873 to 1876 the artist lived and worked in France 2 Repin returned from Paris to St Petersburg in July 1876 3 and later went back to his hometown of Chuguev where he stayed until September 1877 4 He then returned to Moscow 5 where he would live and work for the next five years Repin began working on the theme of procession in 1877 His main work on this theme Religious Procession in Kursk Governorate was begun in 1880 in Moscow and completed in 1883 in St Petersburg where the artist moved in September 1882 6 Repin wrote to art critic Vladimir Stasov in a letter dated 2 January 1881 7 I will move to St Petersburg and begin the paintings I have long conceived from the most burning reality that surrounds us understandable to us and exciting us more than all past events In the early 1880s Repin was greatly influenced by the assassination of Emperor Alexander II by Pervomartovtsy literally meaning those of March 1 as well as by the public execution of the assassins which he attended 8 9 In the mid late 1870s Repin conceived the idea of creating a series of paintings on the theme of Narodism a political movement of the Russian intelligentsia in the 1870s The first of the Narodniki series is the painting Under Escort On the Muddy Road Pod konvoem Po gryaznoj doroge 1876 followed by Arrest of a Propagandist Arest propagandista 1880 1889 Before Confession Pered ispovedyu 1879 1885 and Meeting Shodka 1883 10 11 12 The 11th travelling exhibition which featured Repin s Religious Procession in the Kursk Province and several other works opened in St Petersburg in March 1883 13 Ilya Repin and Vladimir Stasov travelled to Europe in the second half of May of that year visiting Berlin Dresden Munich Paris Madrid Venice and several cities in the Netherlands 14 In early June Repin returned to St Petersburg and later settled in the dacha village of Martyshkino near Oranienbaum 15 Creation edit nbsp First version of They Did Not Expect Him 1883 There are two different versions of They Did Not Expect Him Repin began work on the first one in 1883 depicting a student s return to her family This oil on wood painting has a relatively small format 45 8 37 cm 16 17 Fifteen years later in 1898 Repin reworked this version making several changes to the figure of the young woman 18 whose face was reminiscent of his daughter Nadia 19 It is currently in the Tretyakov Gallery s collection 16 nbsp Sketch for They Did Not Expect Him 1884 In his 1948 article titled New Pages of Repin s Creative Biography art historian Ilya Zilberstein ru discussed the first version of They Did Not Expect Him According to him the painting was intended to feature a young girl as the main character Her revolutionary attire was strikingly similar to that of The Student ru in Nikolai Yaroshenko s painting as both heroines wore plaid with a small cap on their heads According to Ilya Zilberstein when Repin saw The Student and read the press reviews he decided to replace the character of the young girl in the second version of his painting with that of a young man 20 Repin began painting a second version which would become the main one in 1884 It was much larger and the woman who had entered the room had been replaced by a man The painter worked on it in his country house in Martyshkino near Saint Petersburg and posed for it with members of his family and acquaintances 21 The model for the exile s mother is thus partly Vera Alexeievna Repin s wife and partly Varvara Komarova ru Stasov s daughter that of the child Sergei Kostytchev ru the son of a neighbour who would later be a renowned biochemist professor and academician that of the young girl Vera Repina the painter s eldest daughter and that of the maid an employee of the Repins 22 23 24 The man entering the room is thought to be Vsevolod Garshin whose portrait Repin worked on in 1884 The resemblance to the writer is complete in an intermediate version of the painting 25 26 27 The father of the exile is also depicted in the early sketches notifying everyone else of his impending arrival The critic Vladimir Stasov also mentions the silhouette of an old man Repin left only the characters who in his opinion were necessary for the psychological development of the theme he had chosen and for the coherence of the scenic action in the final version 22 12th traveling exhibition and sale of the painting edit The painting was included in the 12th itinerant exhibition of the Peredvizhniki which was then in Saint Petersburg beginning in 1884 Pavel Tretyakov had decided not to buy the painting 27 after telling Repin that it had many qualities but also flaws its subject did not interest him but it seemed to him that it would touch the public 28 Repin himself was also not entirely satisfied with the painting s visual treatment of the theme of exile s return 29 They Did Not Expect Him then travelled to various cities throughout Russia with the travelling exhibition 28 Pavel Tretyakov informed Repin at the end of the trip that he had decided to purchase the canvas Repin had also received another offer from Fyodor Tereshchenko ru but turned it down because he wanted to retouch the male character When the painting was finished Pavel Tretyakov was able to acquire it for his collection raising the purchase price from 5 000 to 7 000 rubles 27 Repin returned to the painting in 1885 1887 and 1888 The changes he made were mostly to the expression on the exiled man s face Andrey Denyer photographed the canvas before the 1885 modifications and offered the photograph to art critic Vladimir Stasov in 1884 16 Analysis editSubject edit The canvas depicts the moment when a man enters a room He is an exile most likely a member of the Narodnaya Volya a Russian revolutionary political organisation founded in the nineteenth century who has returned from a remote region of Russia Those in the room who appear to be his family were surprised to see him Repin expresses the full range of their emotions in all of their diversity and in the moment they are created There is the hesitant joy of the woman seated at the piano the exiled man s wife and that of the boy seated at the table the young girl who looks to the side probably unaware of who the man is the wary astonishment of the maid standing in the entrance the middle aged woman in the foreground his mother whose bent figure expresses profound upheaval 30 31 Composition edit The man s emotion is also palpable Repin painted and changed his facial expression and head inclination at least three times Repin had to choose a head inclination position between the elevation of the hero and the lassitude of the martyr and he eventually retained a questioning and uncertain expression where there is also heroism and suffering 22 The pictorial composition revolves around the exile and his mother as well as their exchange of gazes The mother is the link that connects her son who is still a stranger in this luminous interior to the rest of the family The movement she makes towards him is highlighted in the painting by the chair she pushes aside 22 29 The painting s centre is occupied by her hand and that of her daughter in law who is seated at the piano 22 The secondary characters such as the child seated at the table in the right part of the painting give the painting life consistency and a lyrical warmth Other details contribute to this such as the little girl s posture with her unusually curved legs and the sensitively painted furnishings of an apartment typical of a family of the intelligentsia at the time 22 Details of characters nbsp Returned exile nbsp Mother and wife of the exile nbsp Boy and girl nbsp Maid and cookSymbolism edit Repin emphasises the political and spiritual dimensions of a return following a conviction for revolutionary activity This return would have been considered an unexpected and miraculous event and even a resurrection during this period of history when long sentences were common The mother rising from her armchair to meet her son is reminiscent of how scenes from the Gospels such as the resurrection of Lazarus or the Last Supper at Emmaus are depicted It is also similar to Alexander Ivanov s painting The Appearance of Christ Before the People 32 and it establishes a link with the theme of guilt the prodigal son s return 29 The apartment s wall is covered with reproductions that support the painting s political and moral symbolism These are portraits of democratic writers Nikolay Nekrasov and Taras Shevchenko a Christ on Golgotha a symbol of suffering and atonement and a revolutionary intellectual There is also a depiction of Emperor Alexander II on his deathbed having been murdered by the Narodniki 19 29 The painting is full of surprises stylistically the side lighting the perspective the door frame and the window in a row the set of frames recall Dutch painters The colours are very well mixed the blues are mixed with green the browns with greys and purples the reds are purplish 33 Reception editThey Did Not Expect Him was praised by critic as a masterpiece of the Russian art school 19 He stated 34 They Did Not Expect Him by Repin exhibition s most talented and remarkable work It contains a great deal of depth and the expression of a brilliant thought It reflects our time without blushing or hypocrisy and the public appreciated and loved it for that The painting received a mixed reaction from painter and critic Alexandre Benois He considers the artificial staging grimacing characters and a primary narration to be the painting s weaknesses in his book History of Russian Painting in the Nineteenth Century the gaze passes from a bombastic melodrama to rather superficial characters but stops with pleasure on an interior treated to perfection of a grey full of force and of a lively and simple painting 35 The painting was dubbed the most significant and monumental of the artist s works on revolutionary themes by art critic Aleksei Fedorov Davydov 22 In his book on Repin he writes 22 18 They Did Not Expect Him is an outstanding canvas by Repin for its beauty and mastery of pictorial choices It is painted in full light on the motif and its luminous colorism communicates a soft and clear lyricism that softens the drama it represents The painter advances genre and historical painting by locating and depicting contemporary heroes Or more precisely he causes them to reach a specific force paving the way for a painting of contemporary history Alain Besancon a French historian regards the painting exemplary for the connection it creates between painting and literature 33 Repin s skill is bringing together on the stage suggested by classical perspective the elements of a drama that are advanced sequentially on a real theatrical stage or in a novel and which are presented simultaneously here The eye can browse these messages which are conveyed in traditional painting through the militant s peasant clothing the tottering pose of the old lady the expressions on the faces and the mute participation of Nekrassov and Shevchenko The artist and art critic Igor Grabar wrote that the paintings They Did Not Expect Him and Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan became the highest points in Repin s career both in terms of the power of expression and pictorial power According to him no other Repin painting could ever top these two 36 Similarly art critic Dmitry Sarabyanov ru regarded They Did Not Expect Him as one of the pinnacles of Russian painting of the 19th century 37 Legacy editThe painting was featured on a Soviet postage stamp released in 1969 They Did Not Expect Him was displayed at the Repin exhibition at Paris s Petit Palais from 5 October 2021 to 23 January 2022 38 nbsp Soviet post stamp 1969 References editCitations edit Repin Ilya Efimovich Great Soviet Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2 April 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2021 Bruk amp Iovleva 2006 p 167 Grabar 1948 p 169 Grabar 1948 p 176 Grabar 1948 p 186 Grabar 1948 p 245 Perepiska s V V Stasovym 1877 1894 NEB Nacionalnaya elektronnaya biblioteka rusneb ru Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 11 April 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link G Yu Sternin E V Kirillina 1996 Ilya Repin 1844 1930 in Russian Orig ausg ed Saint Petersburg Avrora p 63 ISBN 978 1 85995 211 5 Lyaskovskaya Olga 1953 K istorii sozdaniya kartiny I E Repina Ivan Groznyj i syn ego Ivan 16 noyabrya 1581 goda Ilya Efimovich Repin Ilya Yefimovich Repin in Russian Moscow Archived from the original on 18 November 2021 Retrieved 18 November 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link T V Yudenkova 1998 Kartina I E Repina Ne zhdali Hudozhestvennoe samosoznanie obshestva 1880 h godov Painting by I E Repin They Did Not Expect Him Artistic self consciousness of society in the 1880s Iskusstvoznanie in Russian 2 376 407 Alexandrova Natalya Nikonova Natalya Vvedenskaya Elena 2010 Geroi i zlodei russkoj istorii v iskusstve XVIII XX vekov Heroes and criminals in the history of Russian art from the 18th to the 20th century in Russian Saint Petersburg p 95 ISBN 978 5 93332 355 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ilya Repin Galereya kartin i risunkov hudozhnika Ivan Groznyj i syn ego Ivan 16 noyabrya 1581 goda 1885 Ilya Repin Gallery of paintings and drawings of the artist Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan November 16 1581 1885 ilya repin ru in Russian Archived from the original on 18 August 2011 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Korolyova 2010 p 20 Lyaskovskaya 1982 pp 202 212 Lyaskovskaya 1982 p 212 a b c Bruk amp Iovleva 2006 pp 217 218 Repin Ilya Efimovich Ne zhdali 1883 1898 Repin Ilya Efimovich They Did Not Expect Him 1883 1898 www art catalog ru in Russian Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 11 April 2022 a b A A Fyodorov Davydov Repin Ilya Efimovich Ne zhdali Rossijskij obsheobrazovatelnyj portal in Russian Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 a b c Evstratova E H 2008 Repin Repin in Russian Moscow OLMA Media Grupp pp 72 75 ISBN 978 5 37300 683 5 Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 Retrieved 11 April 2022 Grabar 1948 p 8 Korolyova 2010 a b c d e f g h A A Fyodorov Davydov 1989 I E Repin I E Repin in Russian Moscou Iskusstvo izdatelstvo pp 68 70 ISBN 978 5 98724 030 4 A I Leonov 1971 Russkoe iskusstvo ocherki o zhizni i tvorchestve hudozhnikov Russian art elements on the life and work of painters in Russian Vol 2 Moscow Iskusstvo izdatelstvo p 20 N to Mashkovcev 1943 I E Repin kratkij ocherk zhizni i tvorchestva 1844 1930 I E Repin a brief sketch of life and work 1844 1930 in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo izdatelstvo p 67 A A Paramonov 1952 Illyustracii I E Repina in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo izdatelstvo p 144 Elizabeth Kridl Valkenier The Writer as Artist s model Repin s portrait of Garshin PDF Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2019 a b c Yudenkova Tatyana Sobranie Tretyakovki Kartina Ili Repina Ne zhdali Collection of the Tretyakov Gallery Painting by Ilya Repin They Did Not Expect Him Eho Moskvy in Russian Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 a b Tatyana Yudenkova Neustannoe sluzhenie K istorii kollekcii P M Tretyakova Relentless service On the history of the collection of P M Tretyakov www nasledie rus ru in Russian Archived from the original on 20 February 2020 Retrieved 11 April 2022 a b c d T V Yudenkova 2010 Repin neischerpaem Hudozhnik in Russian Archived from the original on 22 September 2015 Repin Ilya Efimovich Ne zhdali Ilya Efimovich Repin They Did Not Expect Him Tretyakov Gallery in Russian Archived from the original on 16 May 2017 Ilya Repin Galereya kartin i risunkov hudozhnika Ne zhdali 1884 Ilya Repin Gallery of paintings and drawings of the artist They Did Not Expect Him 1884 ilya repin ru in Russian Archived from the original on 12 March 2013 Retrieved 11 April 2022 E Allenova 2000 Ilya Repin Ilya Repin in Russian Moscow Belyj gorod p 63 ISBN 978 5 7793 0220 3 a b Alain Besancon 1962 A big problem the dissidence of Russian painting 1860 1922 Annals History Social Sciences in French 17 2 doi 10 3406 ahess 1962 420817 S2CID 161156519 Archived from the original on 25 March 2022 Retrieved 12 April 2022 V V Stasov 1950 Izbrannoe zhivopis skulptura grafika Favorites painting sculpture graphics in Russian Vol 1 Iskusstvo Benua A H 1995 Istoriya russkoj zhivopisi v XIX veke History of Russian painting in the 19th century in Russian Moscow Respublika pp 267 272 ISBN 978 5 250 02524 9 Grabar 1948 p 285 Sarabyanov 1955 p 193 Ilya Repine 1844 1930 Petit Palais in French 18 June 2021 Archived from the original on 12 April 2022 Retrieved 11 April 2022 General and cited references edit Bruk Ya V Iovleva L I 2006 Gosudarstvennaya Tretyakovskaya galereya katalog sobraniya State Tretyakov Gallery collection catalog in Russian Vol 4 Moscow Krasnaya ploshad ISBN 978 5 93221 081 9 Grabar Igor 1948 Repin Repin in Russian Vol 1 Moscow Izdatelstvo Akademii nauk SSSR Korolyova S 2010 Ilya Efimovich Repin Velikie hudozhniki tom 20 Ilya Efimovich Repin Great Artists Volume 20 in Russian Vol 20 Moscow Direkt Media i Komsomolskaya pravda ISBN 978 5 87107 193 9 Lyaskovskaya O A 1982 Ilya Efimovich Repin Zhizn i tvorchestvo Ilya Efimovich Repin Life and art in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo Sarabyanov Dmitrij Vladimirovich 1955 Narodno osvoboditelnye idei russkoj zhivopisi vtoroj poloviny XIX veka People s liberation ideas of Russian painting in the second half of the 19th century in Russian Moscow Iskusstvo External links edit nbsp Media related to Ne zhdali at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title They Did Not Expect Him amp oldid 1199205608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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