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Sergej Timofeevic Konenkov Sold at Auction Prices

Sculptor, b. 1874 - d. 1971

Sergey Timofeyevich Konenkov (also Sergei Konyonkov) (10 July [O.S. 28 June] 1874 – 9 December 1971) was a famous Russian and Soviet sculptor. He was often called "the Russian Rodin".

Early life: Konenkov was born in a peasant family, in a village of Karakovichi in Smolensk province.[1] Sergey studied at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, graduating in 1897,[2] and at the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts. His diploma work at the Academy - a huge clay statue of Samson tearing the chains - broke most existing laws of academic art and put him at odds with his teachers, who apparently destroyed the work with hammers.[2]

1900-1924 Period: He travelled to Italy, France, Egypt, Greece, and Germany.

During the Russian revolution of 1905 Konenkov was with the workers on the barricades, soon after creating portraits of the heroes of the rebellion in Moscow. Konenkov later supported the Russian Revolution of 1917.

In 1922 Konenkov married Margarita Ivanovna Vorontsova, and in 1923 they travelled to the United States to take part in an exhibition of Russian and Soviet art. The trip was supposed to last for a few months, but Konenkov stayed in the States for 22 years, living and working in New York City.

Work in US: In 1928–1929 the sculptor visited Italy to meet and work on a portrait of the Soviet writer Maksim Gorky. He had a personal exhibition in Rome.

During the American period, Konenkov created a large body of work focusing on Bible themes, notably the Apocalypse. He produced works depicting Jesus Christ and the Christian prophets and apostles.

In 1935 he was commissioned by the Princeton University to do a sculpture of Albert Einstein. It is said that Einstein was interested in the work of the Russian sculptor, but was more focused on his wife, Margarita Konenkova. Einstein and Margarita, who also was acquainted with the physicist Robert Oppenheimer, allegedly had a love affair, judging by "nine of the great scientist's apparently genuine love letters, written in 1945 and 1946."[3][4] There have been allegations that Margarita was working in those years for the Soviet Government, but no concrete evidence has been provided to support the theory.[5][6]

Return to Russia: Under direct orders from Joseph Stalin in 1945, a ship was sent to New York to bring Konenkov back to the USSR. The sculptor was given a large studio on Gorky street in the centre of Moscow. He "had found favor enough with the regime to be asked to design a plaque commemorating the first anniversary of the October Revolution on the Senate Tower of the Kremlin."[7]

Konenkov created sculptures of Aleksandr Pushkin, Anton Chekhov, Leo Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Ivan Turgenev, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, Vasily Surikov, Johann Bach, Paganini, to name a few. He also made wood carved crosses and other pieces for the Marfo-Mariinsky Convent in Moscow.

Konenkov received numerous Soviet awards, including the golden star of the Hero of Socialist Labour, the order of Lenin and the title Peoples artist of the USSR.

He is buried in Moscow's Novodevichy Convent.

A street in the Northeastern District of Moscow is named after Konenkov.

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    • Sergei Konenkov
      Mar. 23, 2013

      Sergei Konenkov

      Est: $2,000 - $4,000

      (Russian, 1874-1971)bronze relief plaque depicting Miss Mary Flexner (1873-1947), signed on base rim "S Konenkov", artist often called "the Russian Rodin", 16-1/2 x 14-3/4 x 3-1/2 in., mounted on rectangular wooden frame, 27 x 21 in. overall, plaque in good condition; split to back of frame Provenance: Sold to Benefit the Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky

      Brunk Auctions
    • Man with a Pipe
      Dec. 01, 2011

      Man with a Pipe

      Est: £6,000 - £9,000

      KONENKOV, SERGEI 1874-1971 Man with a Pipe , signed. Wood, height 22 cm.

      MacDougall's
    • KONENKOV, SERGEI Years: 1874-1971 Female
      Nov. 25, 2008

      KONENKOV, SERGEI Years: 1874-1971 Female

      Est: £50,000 - £70,000

      KONENKOV, SERGEI Years: 1874-1971 Female Nudecarved with signature Carved wood, height 110 cm. Authenticity letter from Ms. Marie Turbow Lampard. Related literature: Marie Turow Lampard, John E. Bowlt, Wendy R. Salmond, The Uncommon Vision of Sergei Konenkov, 1874-1971: A Russian Sculptor and His Times, Rutgers University Press, 2001. For similar works see Sergei Kolenkov, Khudojnik RSFSR, Leningrad, 1978, cover. Sergei Konenkov, the genius of Russian wood sculpture, wasone of those responsible for the revival in the use of woodin twentieth century art. His light touch brought a fresh andunexpected modernity to this living, organic material as asculptural medium. His work created a fashion for woodsculpture in Russia, which was enthusiastically supported byall the outstanding masters of the period - Anna Golubkina,Stephen Erzia, Vera Mukhina and Vasiliy Vatatin, who happilyset about fashioning flesh out of timber. Konenkov'sguiding principle was not to compromise the material,which he believed to be sufficient in its own right and requiredno embellishment. In fact, Konenkov transformed woodinto one of the central materials in Russian sculpture. TheSoviet authorities had little use for art of this type, as woodencompositions were deemed unsuitable for their favouredmonumental propaganda. This allowed wooden sculpturesto develop into a more harmonious genre, free from falsepathos and official monumentalism.

      MacDougall's
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