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A
Russian Odyssey:
The Art and Times of Ivan Djeneeff |
| September 9 through
October 28, 2001 |
This exhibition of paintings, watercolors
and drawings spans the diverse career of Ivan Alexeyevich Djeneeff,
a Russian-American artist whose life experiences resemble an historical
novel. Born on his familys estate in 1868, the young nobleman
was trained in the Classics, studied under Russias finest nineteenth
century painters at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg,
and carried out postgraduate studies at the Academie Julian in Paris.
His life revolved around the vibrant artistic world of late Romanov
Russia.
A Russian Odyssey includes works painted
in Russia in the early twentieth century. It also contains sketches
completed during his career as a Russian officer during World War
I and works dating from his assignment as a weapons inspector in the
United States.
From Djeneeffs exile in America
during the Bolshevik Revolution until his death in 1955, he created
a body of work much of which can be described as a nostalgic look
at the Russia of his youth, vivid depictions from Slavic folk tales,
and scenes from Russian history. Paintings produced during his residence
at the prestigious MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire also form a part
of the exhibition, as do designs for important American commissions.
Djeneeff
exhibition organized and circulated by Meridian
International Center, Washington, DC. Above descriptive text
courtesy of Meridian International Center and Dr. Alison
Hilton, exhibition curator.
For additional information
about Oglethorpe University Museum events, call (404) 364-8555,
or use our response
form to email us your comments or questions.
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