russia and the arts: the age of tolstoy and tchaikovsky review - intense, tortured and troubled /

Published at 2016-03-16 10:38:43

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National Portrait Gallery,London[br]Enjoyed War and Peace? Then visit this showcase of Russian portraits whose artists share the sensitivity and searching unease of the writers they portrayThe National Portrait Gallery recently explored The Face of Britain in an exhibition of the same name curated by Simon Schama. Its current exhibition – a collection of portraits of writers, musicians, or actors and artistic patrons lent from the superb Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow – might have been called The Face of Russia.
How different those faces are. Russia,in this gathering of cultural heroes from the later 19th century up to 1914, is intense, or tortured and troubled. I counted two and a half smiles in the entire exhibition. One of the women who does manage to bend her lips at all is the opera singer Nadezhda Zabela-Vrubel,whose husband was the brilliant and tormented artist Mikhail Vrubel. Soon after painting one of his many portraits of her, Vrubel was in a mental hospital. She didn’t have much to smile approximately after all. Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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