Who painted the morning in a pine forest. "Morning in a pine forest"

It just so happened that for the packaging of the “Teddy Bear” sweets and their analogues a century ago, designers chose a painting by Shishkin and Savitsky. And if Shishkin is known for his forest landscapes, then Savitsky is remembered by the general public exclusively for his bears.

With rare exceptions, the subject of Shishkin's paintings (if you look at this issue broadly) is one - nature. Ivan Ivanovich is an enthusiastic, loving contemplator. And the viewer becomes an eyewitness to the painter’s meeting with his native expanses.

Shishkin was an extraordinary expert on the forest. He knew everything about trees of different species and noticed errors in the drawing. In the plein airs, the artist’s students were ready to literally hide in the bushes, just so as not to hear criticism in the spirit of “Such a birch cannot exist” or “these pine trees are fake.”

As for people and animals, they occasionally appeared in Ivan Ivanovich’s paintings, but they were more of a background than an object of attention. "Morning in pine forest"- perhaps the only canvas where bears compete with the forest. For this, thanks to one of Shishkin’s best friends - the artist Konstantin Savitsky.

The idea for the painting was suggested to Shishkin by Savitsky, who later acted as a co-author and depicted the figures of the bear cubs. These bears, with some differences in poses and numbers (at first there were two of them), appear in preparatory drawings and sketches. Savitsky turned out the animals so well that he even signed the painting together with Shishkin. Savitsky himself told his family: “The painting was sold for 4 thousand, and I am a participant in the 4th share.”

“Morning in a Pine Forest” is a painting by Russian artists Ivan Shishkin and Konstantin Savitsky. Savitsky painted the bears, but the collector Pavel Tretyakov erased his signature, so that Shishkin alone is often indicated as the author of the painting.

The painting conveys in detail the state of nature seen by the artist on Gorodomlya Island. What is shown is not a dense dense forest, but sunlight breaking through the columns of tall trees. You can feel the depth of the ravines, the power of centuries-old trees, the sunlight seems to timidly peek into this dense forest. The frolicking cubs feel the approach of morning.


Portrait of Ivan Ivanovich Shishkin (1832-1898) by I. N. Kramskoy. 1880

Konstantin Apollonovich Savitsky
(1844 - 1905)
Photo.


Wikipedia

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“Morning in a Pine Forest” is perhaps one of the most famous paintings Ivan Shishkin. The first thing that attracts and touches the audience looking at the masterpiece is the bears. Without animals, the picture would hardly have turned out so attractive. Meanwhile, few people know that it was not Shishkin, another artist named Savitsky, who painted the animals.

Bear Master

Konstantin Apollonovich Savitsky is now not as famous as Ivan Ivanovich Shishkin, whose name probably even a child knows. Nevertheless, Savitsky is also one of the most talented Russian painters. At one time he was an academician and member of the Imperial Academy of Arts. It is clear that it was on the basis of art that Savitsky met Shishkin.
Both of them loved Russian nature and selflessly depicted it on their canvases. But Ivan Ivanovich preferred landscapes in which people or animals, if they appeared, were only in the role minor characters. Savitsky, on the contrary, actively portrayed both. Apparently, thanks to his friend’s skill, Shishkin became convinced that he was not very successful with the figures of living beings.

Help from a friend

At the end of the 1880s, Ivan Shishkin completed another landscape, in which he depicted an unusually picturesque morning in a pine forest. However, according to the artist, the picture lacked some kind of accent, for which he planned to paint 2 bears. Shishkin even made sketches for future characters, but was dissatisfied with his work. It was then that he turned to Konstantin Savitsky with a request to help him with the animals. Shishkin’s friend did not refuse and happily got down to business. The bears turned out to be enviable. In addition, the number of clubfoot has doubled.
To be fair, it is worth noting that Shishkin himself had no intention of cheating at all, and when the picture was ready, he indicated not only his last name, but also Savitsky’s. Both friends were satisfied with their joint work. But everything was ruined by the founder of the world-famous gallery, Pavel Tretyakov.

Stubborn Tretyakov

It was Tretyakov who purchased “Morning in a Pine Forest” from Shishkin. However, the patron did not like the 2 signatures on the painting. And since, after purchasing this or that work of art, Tretyakov considered himself its sole and rightful owner, he went ahead and erased Savitsky’s name. Shishkin began to object, but Pavel Mikhailovich remained adamant. He said that the style of writing, including regarding bears, corresponds to the manner of Shishkin, and Savitsky is clearly superfluous here.
Ivan Shishkin shared the fee he received from Tretyakov with a friend. However, he gave Savitsky only the 4th part of the money, explaining this by the fact that he did the sketches for “Morning” without the help of Konstantin Apollonovich.
Surely Savitsky was offended by such treatment. In any case, he never painted another painting together with Shishkin. And Savitsky’s bears, in any case, really became the decoration of the picture: without them, “Morning in a Pine Forest” would hardly have received such recognition.

Probably almost the most famous painting Russian artist-painter is "Morning in a pine forest". This picture is known and loved by many since childhood because of its wrapping no less beloved chocolates"Teddy Bear." Only a few paintings by Russian artists can compete with the popularity of this work of art.

The idea for the painting was once suggested to the painter Shishkin by the artist Konstantin Savitsky, who acted as a co-author and depicted the figures of bears. As a result, Savitsky turned out the animals so well that he signed the painting together with Shishkin. But when Pavel Mikhailovich Tretyakov acquired the painting, he removed Savitsky’s signature, and the authorship remained only with Shishkin. Tretyakov believed that everything in the picture speaks about the style of painting and creative method, characteristic of Shishkin.

The canvas depicts a dense thicket of a pine forest with a fallen, broken tree on the edge of a ravine. The left side of the picture still retains the twilight of the cold night of the dense forest. Moss covers uprooted tree roots and fallen broken branches. Soft green grass creates a feeling of comfort and tranquility. But the rays rising sun They have already gilded the tops of centuries-old pines and made the morning haze glow. And although the sun is not yet able to completely dispel this night fog, hiding the entire depth of the pine forest from the viewer’s view, the cubs are already playing on the broken trunk of a fallen pine, and the mother bear is guarding them. One of the cubs, having climbed up the trunk closer to the ravine, stood on hind legs and looks curiously into the distance at the light of the haze from the rising sun.

We see not just a monumental canvas about the greatness and beauty of Russian nature. Before us is not only a deep, dense frozen forest with its deep power, but living picture nature. sunlight, breaking through the haze and columns of tall trees, makes you feel the depth of the ravine behind the fallen pine tree, the power of centuries-old trees. The light of the morning sun still looks timidly into this pine forest. But the animals—the frolicking bear cubs and their mother—are already feeling the approach of the sunny morning. The picture is filled with movement and life thanks not only to these four bears loving solitude in the forest, but also to the transitional moment of the awakening early sunny morning after a cold night accurately depicted by the painter. The peaceful smile of the forest spreads: the day will be sunny. It begins to seem to the viewer that the birds have already begun to sing their morning songs. The beginning of a new day promises light and tranquility!

To start: As you know, many epochal events in world history are inextricably linked with the city of Vyatka (in some versions - Kirov (which is Sergei Mironych)). What is the reason for this - the stars may have risen this way, maybe the air or alumina there is particularly healing, maybe the collahedron influenced, but the fact remains: no matter what particularly significant happens in the world, “Vyatka’s hand” can be traced in almost everything. However, until now no one has taken upon themselves the responsibility and hard work of systematizing all significant phenomena that are directly related to the history of Vyatka. In this situation, a group of young promising historians (in my person) undertook to carry out this attempt. As a result, a series of highly artistic scientific and historical essays about documented historical facts under the heading "Vyatka - the birthplace of elephants." Which is what I plan to post on this resource from time to time. So, let's begin.

Vyatka - the birthplace of elephants

Vyatka bear - main character paintings "Morning in pine forest»

Art historians have long proven that Shishkin painted the painting “Morning in a Pine Forest” from life, and not from the wrapper of the “Teddy Bear” candy. The history of writing the masterpiece is quite interesting.

In 1885, Ivan Ivanovich Shishkin decided to paint a canvas that would reflect the deep strength and immense power of the Russian pine forest. The artist chose the Bryansk forests as the place to paint the canvas. For three months Shishkin lived in a hut, seeking unity with nature. The result of the action was the landscape “Sosnovy Bor. Morning". However, Ivan Ivanovich’s wife Sofya Karlovna, who served as the main expert and critic of the great painter’s paintings, felt that the canvas lacked dynamics. At the family council, it was decided to add forest life to the landscape. Initially, it was planned to “launch” hares along the canvas, however, their small dimensions would hardly have been able to convey the power and strength of the Russian forest. We had to choose from three textured representatives of the fauna: bear, wild boar and elk. The selection was made using the cut-off method. The boar disappeared immediately - Sofya Karlovna did not like pork. Sokhaty also did not qualify for the competition, since an elk climbing a tree would have looked unnatural. In search of a suitable bear that won the tender, Shishkin was again resettled in the Bryansk forests. However, this time he was disappointed. All Bryansk bears seemed skinny and unattractive to the painter. Shishkin continued his search in other provinces. For 4 years the artist wandered through the forests of the Oryol, Ryazan and Pskov regions, but never found an exhibit worthy of a masterpiece. “The bear is not purebred today, maybe a wild boar will do after all?” Shishkin wrote to his wife from the hut. Sofya Karlovna helped her husband here too - in Brem’s encyclopedia “Animal Life” she read that the bears living in the Vyatka province have the best exterior. A biologist described the brown bear of the Vyatka line as “a well-built animal with a correct bite and well-standing ears.” Shishkin went to Vyatka, Omutninsky district, in search of the ideal animal. On the sixth day of living in the forest, not far from his cozy dugout, the artist discovered a den of magnificent representatives of the brown bear breed. The bears also discovered Shishkin and Ivan Ivanovich completed them from memory. In 1889, the great canvas was ready, certified by Sofia Karlovna and placed in the Tretyakov Gallery.

Unfortunately, few people now remember the significant contribution of Vyatka nature to the painting “Morning in a Pine Forest”. But in vain. To this day, the bear in these parts is powerful and purebred. It is a well-known fact that the Gromyk bear from the Zonikha animal farm posed for the emblem of the 1980 Olympics.

Vyacheslav Sykchin,
independent historian,
chairman of the bearologists' cell
Vyatka Darwinist Society.

It’s amazing how the life of a work of art that comes from the brush of a master can turn out. Everyone knows I. Shishkin’s painting “Morning in a Pine Forest” and mainly as the painting “Three Bears”. The paradox also lies in the fact that the canvas depicts four bears, which were completed by the magnificent genre painter K. A. Savitsky.

A little from the biography of I. Shishkin

The future artist was born in Yelabuga in 1832, on January 13, in the family of a poor merchant who was passionate about local history and archeology. He enthusiastically passed on his knowledge to his son. The boy stopped attending the Kazan gymnasium after the fifth grade, and all free time spent drawing from life. Then he graduated not only from the painting school in Moscow, but also from the academy in St. Petersburg. His talent as a landscape painter was fully developed by this time. After a short trip abroad, the young artist went to his native place, where he painted nature untouched by human hands. He exhibited his new works at exhibitions of the Peredvizhniki, amazing and delighting viewers with the almost photographic veracity of his canvases. But the most famous painting was “Three Bears,” painted in 1889.

Friend and co-author Konstantin Apollonovich Savitsky

K.A. Savitsky was born in Taganrog into the family of a military doctor in 1844. He graduated from the Academy in St. Petersburg and continued to improve his skills in Paris. When he returned, P. M. Tretyakov acquired his first work for his collection. Since the 70s of the 19th century, the artist exhibited his most interesting genre works at exhibitions of the Itinerants. K. A. Savitsky quickly gained popularity among the general public. The author especially likes his canvas “Acquainted with the Evil One,” which can now be seen in the State Tretyakov Gallery. Shishkin and Savitsky became such close friends that Ivan Ivanovich asked his friend to become godfather own son. Unfortunately for both of them, the boy died at the age of three. And then other tragedies swept over them. Both buried their wives. Shishkin, submitting to the will of the Creator, believed that troubles reveal an artistic gift in him. He also appreciated his friend’s great talent. Therefore, it is not surprising that K.A. Savitsky became the co-author of the film “Three Bears”. Although Ivan Ivanovich himself knew how to write animals very well.

“Three Bears”: description of the painting

Art critics honestly admit that they do not know the history of the painting. Her plan, the very idea of ​​the canvas, apparently arose while searching for nature on one of large islands Seliger Gorodomlya. The night is receding. Dawn is breaking. The first rays of the sun break through the thick tree trunks and the fog rising from the lake. One powerful pine tree, uprooted from the ground and half broken, occupies the central part of the composition. A fragment of it with a dried crown falls into the ravine on the right. It is not written, but its presence is felt. And what a wealth of colors the landscape painter used! The cool morning air is blue-green, slightly cloudy and foggy. The mood of awakening nature is conveyed in green, blue and sunny yellow colors. In the background, golden rays flicker brightly in the high crowns. The hand of I. Shishkin is felt throughout the work.

Meeting of two friends

Show new job Ivan Ivanovich wanted it for his friend. Savitsky came to the workshop. This is where questions arise. Either Shishkin suggested that Konstantin Apollonovich add three bears to the picture, or Savitsky himself looked at it with a fresh look and made a proposal to introduce an animalistic element into it. This, undoubtedly, should have enlivened the desert landscape. And so it was done. Savitsky very successfully, very organically fit four animals onto a fallen tree. The well-fed, cheerful cubs turned out to be like little children frolicking and exploring the world under the supervision of a strict mother. He, like Ivan Ivanovich, signed on canvas. But when Shishkin’s painting “Three Bears” came to P. M. Tretyakov, he, having paid the money, demanded that Savitsky’s signature be washed away, since the main work was done by Ivan Ivanovich, and his style was undeniable. This is where we can finish the description of Shishkin’s painting “Three Bears”. But this story has a “sweet” continuation.

Confectionery factory

In the 70s years XIX centuries, enterprising Germans Einem and Geis built a confectionery factory in Moscow, which produced very high-quality candies, cookies and other similar products. To increase sales, an advertising proposal was invented: print reproductions of Russian paintings on candy wrappers, and on the back - brief information about the picture. It turned out both tasty and educational. It is now unknown when P. Tretyakov’s permission was received to put reproductions of paintings from his collection on candy, but on one of the candy wrappers, which depicts the painting “Three Bears” by Shishkin, the year is 1896.

After the revolution, the factory expanded, and V. Mayakovsky was inspired and composed an advertisement, which is printed on the side of the candy wrapper. She called for saving money in the savings bank to buy tasty, but expensive candies. And to this day you can buy “ Clubfoot bear”, which is remembered by all sweet tooths as “The Three Bears”. The same name was assigned to the painting by I. Shishkin.

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