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Lot 53: ALEXANDER LAKTIONOV

Est: £120,000 GBP - £180,000 GBPSold:
Sotheby'sLondon, United KingdomJune 06, 2011

Item Overview

Description

ALEXANDER LAKTIONOV 1910-1972 VISITING MY GRANDMOTHER oil on canvas 141 by 116.5cm, 55 1/2 by 45 3/4 in.

Artist or Maker

Exhibited

Abilene, Texas, The Grace Museum, Russian Impressionism 1930-1980, November 1998-January 1999
Nashville, Tennessee, Tennessee State Museum, Russian Realism: Paintings From Behind the Iron Curtain, March-May 2000
Minneapolis, Minnesota, The Museum of Russian Art, Colors of a Russian Winter, January-April 2007

Notes

'Of all the subjects in Soviet art the most significant was the painting of children' (V.Swanson, Soviet Impressionist Painting, p.307). Everyday family life, and especially the schooling of the next generation, was as legitimate a choice for post-war Soviet genre painting as major socio-political themes. The meticulous style of the present painting is typical of Alexander Laktionov's work, which can be seen in the context of early photo-realism – extremely popular with the Soviet public, but the source of controversy among his contemporary critics. Laktionov's most famous painting, A Letter From the Front (1947), is bathed in a similarly warm glow. 'True happiness,' according to the artist, was 'to work without too much cleverness, without fuss, constantly learning from nature, drinking in the true source of eternal freshness and understanding life'. Born in Rostov-on-Don and taught at the Leningrad Academy of Arts by Isaak Brodsky, Laktionov finds a legitimate comparison in many ways with the American post-war artist, Norman Rockwell, whose vivid and affectionate portraits of his country were reappraised by serious art critics late in his lifetime.

Auction Details

Important Russian Art

by
Sotheby's
June 06, 2011, 12:00 PM GMT

34-35 New Bond Street, London, LDN, W1A 2AA, UK