The Painter's Keys Community For Artists

Yes, please go ahead, forward this clickback to a friend: by email or

Related Clickbacks:

Soviet lessons A small spirit The art of war

The Moscow Metro Underground 
::: click images to enlarge :::
The Moscow Metro The Moscow Metro - Bas-relief The Moscow Metro - Ceiling mosaic
The Moscow Metro - Mural The Moscow Metro - Stained glass The Moscow Metro

From Russia with love
May 6th, 2005

Dear Artist,

In St. Petersburg you don't want to order your vodka with orange juice. It's considered a "waste" and servers will frown at your lack of couth. You take the classic shooter straight. Cruising Russian art of recent times also reveals other ways of doing things. The strong academic tradition holds valuable techniques not always seen in the West. While there are lots of "flat" and "slick" trends, there are also attractive impasto tricks.

One of these is called "punching." Spent or nearly-spent oil or acrylic tubes are opened up from the bottom and reloaded with newly mixed or partially-mixed pigment. A small (often irregularly shaped) hole is then punched in the lid or sometimes on the tube's side. The tube is then dragged and squeezed like toothpaste to create a sinuous and variable raised line.

In oil--the medium of choice--the use of palette knives, trowels and plastics together with brushwork is common. A painter told me that this was the main use of credit cards for Russian artists. Linen canvas is the norm but many work on a much poorer material similar to sign-cotton. Watercolour is less common and many are small, illustrative and of the "souvenir" genre. Giclees and photocopies of watercolours are passed off as originals to the unsuspecting in outdoor markets. Commercial art galleries are not so frequent and are often bunched together. Quality can be remarkable. There are lots of "original" copies of popular paintings--this seems to be acceptable practice. It's considered a rite of passage and good training too. I noticed excellent copies of living Canadian and American popular artists. So far framing in Russia has been mostly golden, curly, and busy.

Through all political periods painting and sculpture have been at the very core of Russian life. Art here is both intellectual and spiritual, and there is much talk about it in the cafes and bars. There's not much "Modernism" around. Even the Picassos and Cezannes are hard to find and seem a bit dingy and unkempt. At the Russian Academy students energetically trundle giant canvases and run with their folios toward waiting trams. Here, a Western visitor is somewhat of a curiosity. Two girls laugh and tell me that I look like Saint Nicholas. No mention of Rasputin. I can't help feeling a fresh breeze here on the sunny banks of the Neva.

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Soviet Russian cultural policy did not allow any progress of the avant-garde. Everybody was completely concerned with the requirements of standardization. In 1932 all artists had to enter the Artist's Union." (A. D. Borovsky)

Esoterica: Kasimir Malevich was an interesting case. After a trip to Germany in 1927 his art became increasingly "decadent." He was persecuted but did not yield. Ironically, in 2002, the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg bought a variation of his well-known "Black Square." I sat for some time on the bench beside it as the various guides came by. "It's just a joke," I heard them say in English, French, German, and Japanese. It made me think they might be working from a script.


Kasimir Malevich (1878-1935) Paintings 
::: click images to enlarge :::
Self-portrait, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1933
Self-portrait
oil painting, 1933
Black Square, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1913
Black Square
oil painting, 1913
Suprematism, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1916
Suprematism
oil painting, 1916
Complex Presentiment: Half-Figure in a Yellow Shirt, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1928-1932
Complex Presentiment
oil painting, 1928-1932
An Englishman in Moscow, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1914
Englishman in Moscow
oil painting, 1914
Running Man, oil painting by Kasimir Malevich, 1932-1934
Running Man
oil painting, 1932-1934
 More artwork by Kasimir Malevich 

Artists' Responses to From Russia with love by Robert Genn
Be sure to check our Archives for related material.

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Suzanne Ste. Therese :: "The Hermitage Group" in America

by Suzanne Ste. Therese, Norwalk, CT, USA

contact Suzanne Ste. Therese share Suzanne's letter with a friend

I thought you might be interested in an artists' collective called The Hermitage Group. They exhibited some paintings way back in the '80s in Santa Monica, CA and I was fortunate to secure one while a student ($25.00 at that time). I bought the piece because I knew I could look at it for a lifetime and still see something new.

(RG note) Thanks Susanne. Good going. Originally trained in the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, these artists have since started their own art school in that city. The long distance encouragement has resulted in some of them being better known in the USA than in their homeland. There's a website at The Hermitage Group - Gallery.


, Other letters by Suzanne
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Sarah Zoutewelle :: The art of Nicholas Roerich

by Sarah Zoutewelle, The Netherlands

contact Sarah Zoutewelle share Sarah's letter with a friend

If you are still in Russia, see if you can find the works of Nicholas Roerich. There's a
Waves of Misttempera on board, 1924<br>by Nicholas Roerich
Waves of Mist
tempera on board, 1924
by Nicholas Roerich
 click image to enlarge
wonderful tempera on panel done on the spot in the Himalayas in the beginning of the 20th century. (He also designed stage sets and costumes for Diagelhev) I met his son, Svetoslav Roerich, when my husband and I were in India. In Russia there was a lost generation of master painters.

(RG note) Thanks Sarah. Nicholas Roerich (1874-1947) was not only a painter but philosopher, writer, traveler and public figure. He led an eventful life devoted to spiritual quests. Born in Russia, he toured Europe, America and Asia. As guru and teacher he meditated on the links connecting past and present and the relationship of man in the universe. His paintings, particularly the ones of Tibet and other Eastern Lands, are loaded with mystery and symbolism. I saw several in the Tretyakov in Moscow. One of the best collections is in the USA in New York. See letter below.


top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Carol Lyons :: Has paintings in the Hermitage

by Carol Lyons, Irvington, NY, USA

contact Carol Lyons share Carol's letter with a friend

I am a contemporary American artist who has two paintings in the
Peace-Half Past 5 by Carol Lyons, watercolour
Peace-Half Past 5
watercolour
 click image to enlarge
Hermitage Museum Collection. They are poured watercolors of landscape images – Night of Peace and Peace: Half Past 5. They are signed GREBLEZNIK. That is my maiden name backwards which I sometimes paint under. I have never been there to view the art, but friends have been able to look my work up when they were there. You can never tell who is viewing your work and where it may go. I had a solo show in the Nicholas Roerich Museum in NYC and also one in the Russian Tea Room that led to the Hermitage acquisition. As an experimentalist artist I am motivated by wondering what will happen if I do such and such in art, but, nothing bizarre in materials or image.


, Other letters by Carol, Related material on Has paintings in the Hermitage, Carol Lyons Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Rebecca Stebbins :: Damaged property of the people

by Rebecca Stebbins, Carpinteria, CA, USA

contact Rebecca Stebbins share Rebecca's letter with a friend

Your comment about the "talk in cafes and bars" in St. Petersburg brings me back
Danaeoil on canvas, 1636<br>by Rembrandt
Danae
oil on canvas, 1636
by Rembrandt
 click image to enlarge
to 1985, when I spent a summer studying Russian and Russian culture at what was then Leningrad State University. In June of that year, a man attacked Rembrandt's Danae in the Hermitage with a knife and then poured acid on it, badly damaging the painting. Within hours, people on the streets were talking about it, and I was amazed at how, on a public bus, it became a topic of conversation among ordinary workers, strangers who all seemed to know which painting it was, in which room, and who shared a sense of tragic loss of a great treasure. It was one small experience that, combined with many others, offered a glimpse of a nation that embraces culture in a wonderful way.


, Related material on Damaged property of the people
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Yaroslaw Rozputnyak :: On boggy ground

by Yaroslaw Rozputnyak, Moscow, Russia

contact Yaroslaw Rozputnyak share Yaroslaw's letter with a friend

Even in the Soviet Union they called St. Petersburg the "museum town." You remember the history of renaming of the town from St. Petersburg to Petrograd to Leningrad to St. Petersburg again, but interesting is that the town was built not as only Russian culture center - the famous Italian architects were working there too. Also the great number of Ukrainians, not skilled workers but escapees from Peter the Great's army. In Russia we have a saying: "St. Petersburg is standing on bones." St. Petersburg turned out to be a bad place for large town. Every year flooding takes place and great expenses are made to keep houses from being destroyed by moisture. The large historical buildings are supported from state budget, but even that is not enough. Yes, moisture level must be optimal for oil paintings and other art, but how much art has the Hermitage to show all and to keep all in order. At the same time, tickets are not too cheap, although these are in wonderful politeness usually three times high for foreign tourists. Have you noticed ratio of foreign and Russian tourists in museums? Our art is not always available to the contemporary citizens of the Russia, because of the cost. You are more lucky man than even some Russian artists, say living in Siberia.

(RG note) Thanks Yaroslaw. Foreigners are quickly identified and charged an arm and a leg to go into museums. The locals get in relatively cheaply, but yes, it seems a lot of them can't afford it.


, Other letters by Yaroslaw, Yaroslaw Rozputnyak Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Luke Charchuk :: The Itinerants

by Luke Charchuk, Vancouver, BC, Canada

contact Luke Charchuk share Luke's letter with a friend

Well, now you are speaking of those close to my heart. I take it you are familiar with "The Itinerants." I liken them to the souls of our lost generations, like Hemingway and Kerouac. They saw beyond the hypocrisy of politics into the soul of real human life that dwelt before their eyes. Check out some of the techniques they so aptly used. No credit cards here.

(RG note) Thanks Luke. "The Itinerants" or "The Wanderers" were a group of painters who reacted against the classical traditions of the 1870s and started painting the common folk of Russia as well as the natural landscape. It's hard to believe that at that time painters were expected to stick to a narrow range of well-worn subjects if they were to get scholarships, sales and popular acceptance. For those who are interested you can read more about this movement at Society of Traveling Exhibitions (1870-1923) and The Immortal Itinerants


, Other letters by Luke, Luke Charchuk Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Bernard F. Pracko II :: Trip to Albania

by Bernard F. Pracko II, Broomfield, CO, USA

contact Bernard F. Pracko II share Bernard's letter with a friend

I'm making an "historic trip" to Albania, at the invitation of a painter friend who has
Deus Mythos by Bernard F. Pracko II, Acrylic and Oil Pastel on Canvas
Deus Mythos
Acrylic and Oil Pastel on Canvas
 click image to enlarge
been invited to the Butrint National Park and other places by the Minister of Culture, to paint and be a part of the Albanian government's official first time opening to foreign artists. Only a few students from New York are currently going with their instructor, but a number of other interesting people will be there.


, Other letters by Bernard, Bernard F. Pracko II Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Jill Badonsky :: Modern art supported by the audacious

by Jill Badonsky, Solana Beach, CA, USA

contact Jill Badonsky share Jill's letter with a friend

We all need a dose of audacity when it comes to art because it's a world filled with objectivity. Simple confidence can change perception of both audience and artist. I encourage artists to go to museums of modern art to get the necessary permission they need to convince themselves they are artists. Modern art is supported by the audacious.

New brain research by Robert Maurer at UCLA shows that the three parts of our brains do not work very well together. When something is coveted, like producing a work of art, or anticipated, as in beginning a work or predicting its perceived response, the amygdala can sense fear and override the creative part of our brain--the cortex. We then avoid and procrastinate to get rid of this uncomfortable yet subconscious fear feeling.

I have found two techniques that can help to shut off the fear response so that relaxation and production around art is made easier: 1) We need to give ourselves permission to be imperfect… at least in order to start... viewing every work as practice, and 2) we need to break the steps down so far that fear does not arise… starting the first step with holding the intention of painting in your mind for only 30 seconds a day… until the mind starts to form new pathways to greater resourcefulness and improved confidence. It's worked with me, an anxious artist, as well as with my clients.

(RG note) Thanks Jill. Jill Badonsky is a creativity coach and author of The Nine Modern Day Muses (and a Bodyguard).


, Other letters by Jill, Jill Badonsky Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Isobel McCreight :: Gold Fields a battlefield

by Isobel McCreight, Orillia, ON, Canada

contact Isobel McCreight share Isobel's letter with a friend

Not only war brought devastation, but also "protecting" was life threatening. My grandfather was part of a troop of men ordered to protect the Gold Miners in the Gold Fields and to keep peace in the late 1800s up in the far North. It was called the "Uprising". He kept a diary throughout the trip, from Toronto across the country by train, noting the depression of the men on the trip – the endless trail across the country, up the coast, through the treacherous rivers where many times the boats tipped and all items lost, leaving a man desolate in the thoughts of a faraway home.

When the seasons changed, the killing cold was enough to depress anyone and the buildings were so thin, with of course no insulation… All through this, Grandfather wrote daily and when their tour was over, and the years went by, the diary came to our family. It made the Gold Fields a battlefield and the enemy was the cold, the desperate people who died to find gold and the gold itself. This diary is the only remaining story of their trip and now is in the National Archives.


, Other letters by Isobel, Related material on Gold Fields a battlefield, Isobel McCreight Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Gail Griffiths :: Meditation rests the painter's mind

by Gail Griffiths, Ocean, NJ, USA

contact Gail Griffiths share Gail's letter with a friend

One of my greatest experiences in painting was the painting done mostly in a state
San Juan Capistrano by Gail Griffiths, oil on canvas, 20 x 30 inches
San Juan Capistrano
oil on canvas, 20 x 30 inches
 click image to enlarge
of meditation. I had been clinically depressed and blocked as a painter for a few years. An image I had seen in a photo of my great grandma haunted me daily. I needed to paint this, I had no choice. When I put my brush to the canvas, the act of painting the portrait was a simple one. A task I was dreading with depression looming over me, flowed easily and enjoyably. Three hours later a great portion of the painting was complete. I was barely aware of my strokes. It was as if the painting emerged from the canvas, slowly, on its own. It was the best rest my mind had been given in years.


, Other letters by Gail, Related material on Meditation rests the painter's mind, Gail Griffiths Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'From Russia with love' by Jacqueline Baldini :: Giclee information

by Jacqueline Baldini, Niagara Falls, ON, Canada

contact Jacqueline Baldini share Jacqueline's letter with a friend

Comparing the fading quality of a print done on the Epson 1200 is not a fair comparison (although I own the 1200 and have prints from 1999 that have shown no deterioration). There are inkjet printers that have archival inks (100+ years) I was told by Epson that using the 1200 with archival (d'Arches) watercolor paper, would give the prints a life span of 25-30 years, since the ink would penetrate the paper. If you make your test with a regular photograph, it will fail miserably.


, Other letters by Jacqueline, Related material on Giclee information, Jacqueline Baldini Website,
top of page


World of Art Featured artist Arsen Kurbanov, St. Petersburg, Russia
SELECTIONS FROM THE PAINTER'S KEYS ART DIRECTORY PAGES CLICK HERE FOR A FREE ART LISTING

Featured Artist Arsen Kurbanov, St. Petersburg, Russia
'Apple by Arsen Kurbanov, St. Petersburg, Russia
Apple
Oil painting by artist Arsen Kurbanov, St. Petersburg, Russia
Contact Arsen Kurbanov ::: More artwork by Arsen Kurbanov

Clickback afterthoughts - The Painter's KeysAFTERTHOUGHTS


Please feel free to comment on anyone's remarks. If you add your email address right after your name at the end of your letter, we will include it. If you wish to write incognito we will honor that too. All unused letters are carefully archived for possible future use. We generally include ten or so letters in each "clickback" so you can expect about the same amount of reading. Readers really appreciate it when you tell us approximately where you are located. It would also be great if you could include where we might find some of your work on the net. We edit most letters for clarity and brevity. We are able to translate letters from most languages. Please address your letters to


You may be interested to know that artists from every state in the USA, every province in Canada, and at least 105 countries worldwide have visited these pages since January 1, 2005.


That includes Ellen Kirk who wrote: "Not only do you take your vodka straight, but at room temperature. And don't forget to enjoy the ice cream. They are justly proud of it."

And also Steadman Uhlich who wrote: "Your letters are written as if they come from an old and trusted friend. I also like the sense of being there with you that comes from your details and descriptions of the art, the venues, the sights, the techniques observed, and even the sounds."


If you would like to see selected correspondence relating to the last letter "One room" and others, please go to www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/one-room.asp

If you think a friend or fellow artist may find value in this material please feel free to forward it. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to www.painterskeys.com

The Twice-Weekly Letters are in Russian at painterskeys.narod.ru/ and in French at www.painterskeys.com/lettersarchive.asp?fr2003



 PURCHASE "The Painter's Keys" ( secure payment )
Purchase The Painter's Keys -- by Robert Genn  Please select your currency to begin the payment process 
CANADIAN DOLLARS
US DOLLARS
EUROS
POUNDS STERLING
YEN
OTHER
 Note that all prices include shipping and handling 
CLICK HERE TO READ A FREE CHAPTER


Link Exchange


The Painter's Keys Community Links Pages. To put in a free link to your art site, and up to five specific pages of dealers who handle your work, please send pertinent information to rgenn@saraphina.com. Include your name, web site title & address.

If you would like to add an image to your listing see the new Premium Link Service

To add a reciprocal link, please visit: http://www.painterskeys.com/linktous.asp.

 SAMPLE LINK LISTING
BETA :: send feedback


Below is a sample listing from our growing database of artists and art organizations. Everytime you visit a 'clickback' a different link listing (chosen at random) will be displayed. You can try it out right now by refreshing this page (click the Refresh or Reload button of your browser).

Amir Fazilat

EyeLander.com - illustration and designEyeLander.com - illustration and design
      http://eyelander.com/

About Amir Fazilat...  Amir Fazilat is a freestyle caricature artist living and working in Ontario Canada

click to go to the top of this page

To see more listings from our F section click here


How quotable are you?

The Resource of Art Quotations on our site is the largest of its kind. It's a source of inspiration and motivation for a world of artists, students and art educators. It's also a dynamic, evolving resource. Practically every day our volunteers are finding and putting in new quotes. Lately we've been looking at the writing of those who contribute to these twice-weekly clickbacks. To see if you've been included just type your name--or any name for that matter--into the box below. Press "author search" and thank you for being so quotable.

Search for a quote by author's name :::
Browse Authors Index Browse Quotations by Categories Submit quotations


Previous ClickbackOne room click here to go to the top of this page Next Clickback:  Underground vision Underground vision

HOME CLICKBACKS SUBSCRIBE FREE ART QUOTES ART DIRECTORY
Robert's world-wide gift that artists love to get.

Absolutely free, no strings. Cancel at any time.
You'll get the valuable twice-weekly letter only.
Your email address will not be lent, sold or put
on any spam or other nasty list. Guaranteed.
CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE FREE


Last modified: May 9th, 2005 :: Copyright 2005 Robert Genn, All Rights Reserved