Ivan Nikolaevich Kramskoi (1837-1887) was a Russian painter and art critic. He was an intellectual leader of the Russian democratic art movement in 1860-1880.
Kramskoi came from an impoverished petit-bourgeois family. From 1857 to 1863 he studied at the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts; he reacted against academic art and was an initiator of the "revolt of fourteen" which ended with the expulsion from the Academy of a group of its graduates, who organized the Artel of Artists).
Influenced by the ideas of the Russian revolutionary democrats, Kramskoi asserted the high public duty of the artist, principles of realism, and the moral substance and nationality of art. He became one of the main founders and ideologists of the Company of Itinerant Art Exhibitions. In 1863–1868 he taught at the drawing school of a society for the promotion of applied arts. He created a gallery of portraits of important Russian writers, scientists, artists and public figures, in which expressive simplicity of composition and clarity of depiction emphasize profound psychological elements of character. Kramskoi's democratic ideals found their brightest expression in his portraits of peasants, which portrayed a wealth of character-details in representatives of the common people.
In one of Kramskoi’s most well known paintings, Christ in the Desert (1872), he continued Alexander Ivanov's humanistic tradition by treating a religious subject in moral–philosophical terms. He imbued his image of Christ with dramatic experiences in a deeply psychological and vital interpretation, evoking the idea of his heroic self-sacrifice.
Aspiring to expand the ideological expressiveness of his images, Kramskoi created art that existed on the cusp of portraiture and genre-painting. These paintings disclose their subjects' complex and sincere emotions, their personalities and fates. The orientation of Kramskoi’s art, his acute critical judgments about it, and his persistent quest for objective public criteria for the evaluation of art exerted an essential influence on the development of realist art and aesthetics in Russia in the last third of the nineteenth century.
Kramskoi was considered an eccentric for giving his works to customers in expensive frames and not charging money for it. He died from an aortic aneurism while working at his easel, aged only forty-nine.
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Self Portrait, 1867 |
A Portrait of Sofia Kramskoya, the Painter’s Wife 1866 |
Portrait of the Artist Nikolay Andreyevich Koshelev 1866 |
Portrait of Princess Catherine Alekseevna Vasilchikova 1867 |
Head of an Old Ukranian Peasant 1871 |
Portrait by Ivan Kramskoi 1871 |
Portrait of the Artist Konstantin Savitsky 1871 |
The Mermaids 1871 |
Beekeeper 1872 |
Christ in the Desert 1872 |
Girl with a Loose Braid 1873 |
Portrait of Leo Tolstoy 1873 |
Portrait of the painter Ivan Shishkin 1873 |
The Miller 1873 |
Woodsman 1874 |
Portrait of the poet Yakov Polonsky 1875 |
Contemplator 1876 |
Portrait of the poet Nikolai Nekrasov 1877 |
Portrait of the artist Alexander Dmitrievich Litovchenko 1878 |
Portrait of Adrian Prakhov, Art Critic and Historian 1879 |
Moonlit Night 1880 |
Portrait of Count Pyotr Valuyev 1880 |
Portrait of the Empress Maria Feodorovna 1880 |
Portrait of the Artist Vasily Perov 1881 |
Girl with a Cat 1882 |
Mina Moiseyev 1882 |
Portrait of Nikolay Kramskoy, the Artist`s Son 1882 |
Russian Girl in a Blue Shawl 1882 |
Portrait of an Unknown Woman 1883 |
Woman with an Umbrella (In the Grass, Midday) 1883 |
Portrait of Olga Afanasiyevna Raftopulo 1884 |
Portrait of the Philosopher and Poet Vladimir Solovyov 1885 |
Portrait of Alexander III 1886 |
Portrait of Dr. Karl A. Rauhfus 1887 |
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