'Viktor Mikhailovich Vasnetsov' (Виктор Михайлович Васнецов) (
May 15 (
N.S.),
1848—
June 23,
1926) was a
Russian
artist who specialized in
mythological and
historical subjects. He is considered a key figure of the
revivalist movement in Russian art.
Biography
===Childhood (
1848-
1858)===

''A Knight at the Crossroads''
Viktor Vasnetsov was born in a remote village Lopyal of
Vyatka guberniya in
1848. His father Mikhail Vasilievich Vasnetsov, a village priest, was a well-educated 'philosophy-inclined' man interested in
natural science,
astronomy and
painting. His grandfather was an
icon painter. Two of his three sons, Viktor and
Apollinary, became remarkable painters, the third one becoming a schoolteacher. Recalling his childhood in a letter to
Vladimir Stasov, Vasnetsov remarked that he "had lived with peasant children and liked them not as a
narodnik but as a friend".
===Vyatka (
1858-
1867)===
From the age of ten, Viktor studied in a seminary in Vyatka, each summer moving with his family to a rich merchant village of Ryabovo. During his seminary years, he worked for a local
icon shopkeeper. He also helped an exiled
Polish artist,
Michał Elwiro Andriolli, to execute
frescoes for Vyatka's
Alexander Nevsky cathedral.
Having graduated from the seminary, Viktor decided to move to
Saint Petersburg to study art. He auctioned his paintings of ''Woman Harvester'' and ''Milk-maid'' (both
1867) in order to raise money required for the trip to the Russian capital.

Moving House, 1876
===Saint Petersburg (
1867-
1876)===
In August
1867 Viktor entered the
Imperial Academy of Arts. Three years later, the
Peredvizhniki movement of realist painters rebelled against the
Academism.
Vasnetsov befriended their leader
Ivan Kramskoi, referring to him as his teacher. He also became very close to his fellow student
Ilya Yefimovich Repin.
It is ironic, but Viktor, whose name is associated with historical and mythological paintings, initially avoided these subjects at all costs. For his graphic composition of ''
Christ and
Pontius Pilate Before the People'', the Academy awarded a small silver medal to him.
In the early 1870s he executed a lot of
engravings depicting contemporary life. Two of them (''Provincial Bookseller'' from
1870 and ''A Boy with a Bottle of Vodka'' from
1872) won him a bronze medal at the
World Fair in
London (
1874).
At that period he also started producing
genre paintings in oil. Such pieces as ''Peasant Singers'' (
1873) and ''Moving House'' (
1876) were warmly welcomed by democratic circles of Russian society.

Acrobats in Paris suburb, 1877
===Paris (
1876-
1877)===
In
1876 Repin invited Vasnetsov to join the Peredvizhniki colony in
Paris. While living in France, Viktor studied classical and contemporary paintings, academist and
Impressionist alike. At that period, he painted ''Acrobats'' (
1877), produced prints, and exhibited some of his works at the
Salon. It was in Paris that he became fascinated with fairy-tale subjects, starting to work on ''Ivan-Tsarevich Riding a Grey Wolf'' and ''The Firebird''. Vasnetsov was a model for
Sadko in Repin's celebrated painting ''. In
1877 he returned to
Moscow.
===Moscow (
1877-
1884)===
In the late 1870s Vasnetsov concentrated on illustrating Russian fairy tales and
bylinas, executing some of his best known pieces: ''Knight at the Crossroads'' (
1878), ''
Prince Igor's Battlefield'' (
1878),
'' (
1879-
1881), ''The Magic Carpet'' (
1880), and ''Alionushka'' (
1881).
These works were not appreciated at the time they appeared. Many radical critics dismissed them as undermining the realist principles of the
Peredvizhniki. Even such prominent connoisseurs as
Pavel Mikhailovich Tretyakov refused to buy them. The vogue for Vasnetsov's paintings would spread in the 1880s, when he turned to religious subjects and executed a series of icons for
Abramtsevo estate of his patron
Savva Mamontov.

The Virgin and Child. 1887
===Kiev
1884-
1889===
In
1884-
1889 Vasnetsov was commissioned to paint
frescos in the
St Vladimir's Cathedral of
Kiev. This was a challenging work which ran contrary to both Russian and Western traditions of religious paintings. The influential art critic
Vladimir Stasov labelled them a sacrilegious play with religious feelings of the Russian people. Another popular critic,
Dmitry Filosofov, referred to these frescoes as "the first bridge over 200 years-old gulf separating different classes of Russian society".
While living in Kiev, Vasnetsov made friends with
Mikhail Vrubel, who was also involved in the cathedral's decoration. While they worked together, Vasnetsov taught the younger artist a great deal. It was in Kiev that Vasnetsov finally finished ''Ivan Tsarevich Riding a Grey Wolf'' and started his most famous painting, the ''
Bogatyrs''.
In
1885 the painter travelled to
Italy. The same year he worked on stage designs and costumes for
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's opera ''
The Snow Maiden''.

Frog Tsarevna, 1918
===Later years (
1890-
1926)===
The following two decades were productive ones for Vasnetsov, but most of his later paintings were perceived as being of secondary importance. He increasingly turned to other media during this period. In
1897 he collaborated with his brother Apollinary on the theatrical design of another Rimsky-Korsakov premiere, ''
Sadko'', and he was commissioned in the 1910s to design a new uniform for the Russian military — the so-called
bogatyrka, a Russian army headwear.
At the turn of the century, Vasnetsov elaborated his hallmark "fairy-tale" style of
Russian Revivalist architecture. His first acclaimed design was a church in
Abramtsevo (1882), executed jointly with
Vasily Polenov. In
1894, he designed his own mansion in
Moscow. The Russian pavilion of the World Fair in
Paris followed in
1898. Finally, in
1904, Vasnetsov designed the best known of his "fairy-tale" buildings — the
Tretyakov Gallery.
Between
1906 and
1911, Vasnetsov worked on the design of the mosaics for
Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Warsaw.
In
1912, Vasnetsov was given a noble title by
Czar Nicholas II.
Even prior to the
Russian Revolution, Vasnetsov became active as a regent of that gallery. He allocated a significant portion of his income to the
State Historical Museum, so that a large part of the museum's collection was acquired on Vasnetsov's money. After the
October Revolution he advocated removing some of the religious paintings (notably those by
Alexander Ivanov) from churches to the Tretyakov Gallery.
Selected works
Sources
★ A. K. Lazuko 'Victor Vasnetsov', Leningrad: Khudozhnik RSFSR, 1990, ISBN 5-7370-0107-5
★
Vasnetsov Gallery
★
Victor Vastentzov, Russian Avant Garde Gallery