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Ilya Repin

Ilya Repin Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16 oil painting on canvas
Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16
Painting ID::  60500
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Ilya Repin Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16 oil painting on canvas



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  Ilya Repin
  Ukrainian-born Russian Realist Painter, 1844-1930 was a leading Russian painter and sculptor of the Peredvizhniki artistic school. An important part of his work is dedicated to his native country, Ukraine. His realistic works often expressed great psychological depth and exposed the tensions within the existing social order. Beginning in the late 1920s, detailed works on him were published in the Soviet Union, where a Repin cult developed about a decade later, and where he was held up as a model "progressive" and "realist" to be imitated by "Socialist Realist" artists in the USSR. Repin was born in the town of Chuhuiv near Kharkiv in the heart of the historical region called Sloboda Ukraine. His parents were Russian military settlers. In 1866, after apprenticeship with a local icon painter named Bunakov and preliminary study of portrait painting, he went to Saint Petersburg and was shortly admitted to the Imperial Academy of Arts as a student. From 1873 to 1876 on the Academy's allowance, Repin sojourned in Italy and lived in Paris, where he was exposed to French Impressionist painting, which had a lasting effect upon his use of light and colour. Nevertheless, his style was to remain closer to that of the old European masters, especially Rembrandt, and he never became an impressionist himself.
  Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16
  Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16, 1581, 1870-1873 (Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow)

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