|
Mstera
There are four traditional centres of miniature lacquered box painting in
Russia, which today have become the most famous. They are Fedoskino, Palekh,
Mstera and Kholui. They make up a tightly knit family, influencing each other
and enriching each other, with each one having its own individual character.
Mstera holds a special place in this group, due to its more ancient and maybe
more colourful traditions. A special place in the Mstera icon painting
tradition was held by Byzantine art, the successors of which were first and
foremost the Vladimir and Suzdal icon painters.The Byzantine technique of
painting with flux and Byzantine icon painting was preserved in Mstera for many
centuries, right up until the start of the 20th century.
In Russia, at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th
century, it was no accident that the creation and development of the science of
restoration of ancient Russian art was closely associated with the names of the
Mstera icon-painters and restorers. It was they who became the main medium for
the reintroduction of "forgotten" ancient Russian art among the St. Petersburg
and Moscow professors of the history of art. Almost the whole Mstera population
was involved to some extent with the icon-painting industry. As a rule,
icon-painting workshops were handed down from generation to generation and were
a family business. One of the largest icon-painting workshops was that of
Suslov (a man who came from the shores of the White Sea) and the oldest was
that of the Old Believer, Yantsev.
After the revolution, the private icon-painting workshops in Mstera were
closed. The hungry years after the revolution forced many inhabitants of Mstera
to move to the bread basket provinces. But the majority stayed on in their home
town of Mstera, where a new life was gradually starting to come into being. In
January 1923, the first group of former Mstera icon-painters was formed.
In January 1931, the cooperative decided to send a group of artists to Moscow
to study papier-mache art. In addition another group was sent to Fedoskino to
study lacquering and polishing. It was then that a group of artists was formed
to paint objects made out of papier-mache. The 1930's played a very important
role in the further development of the genre. This was because the art of
miniature lacquer painting was based on the traditions of Mstera icon-painting,
which had existed in that area for many centuries and the experienced
icon-painters and restorers became the basis for this new art form.
The leading Mstera artist among the painters of miniatures should by right be
Nikolai Klykov (1861-1944). It was he, who for a long time was the driving
force behind the search for an original style for the Mstera lacquered
miniatures. His former way of life no longer existed and he was forced to find
new ways of developing Mstera art. In his early work, he used the traditions of
the ancient Russian miniatures of the 15th to 16th centuries. The most
attractive style for the artists was the Stroganov style. He believed that the
great delicacy and colourful variety of this style was most ideally suited to
papier-mache miniatures.
It is characteristic for the period of "atheism", that the Mstera artists did
not stop depicting the sky in their miniature lacquered works (unlike the
Palekh artists who started to paint on black lacquer). In this way, they were
able to keep their spiritual traditions going back to icon-painting, in which
the depiction of the sky as the real and celestial frontier of this world, had
enormous meaning. The 30's see many topical works by N.P.Klykov. These works
stand out due to their sweet naivety, but it is this very naivety that often
borders on the sublime. And it is here that we see a harmonious, stable and
colourful way of life. Klykov painted works depicting Russian folk tales and
episodes from the works of Russian writers, but hardly changed the landscapes
in which his contemporary heroes found themselves. In 1937, at the World
Exhibition in Paris, Klykov's work "Dubrovsky", received a diploma and a gold
medal.
The second generation of Mstera miniature artists were born after the
revolution and were trained at the technical and artistic school that had been
set up in 1932. Besides, the creative talents of these young miniaturists was
interrupted by the Second World War. New period for the development of Mstera
miniature lacquered art was the start of the 1960s. At that time, the visual
arts, witch also included lacquered miniatures, were under the influence of the
so-called “sever style”, with its generalizations, laconism and emphasized
decorativeness.
In the 1970's, the development of Mstera lacquered miniature painting went
along the lines of not so much rejection of the old aesthetic ideals, but the
creation of positive programs for its further development. The new generation
of artists, who replaced those of the 60's, had no declared program, but on the
other hand, they had a strong desire to express their own creative
individuality. At the beginning of the third millennium, there has been a
flowering of Mstera art, that is of icon painting and lacquering miniatures
painting. The creativity of the young artists make it possible to look at
Mstera art in term of an open system which is looking to the future.
|
|