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Pushkinian Elements in Isaak Levitan's Painting "By the Mill-Pond" Print E-mail
Volume 06-07 (2003-04) - Vols. 6-7: Notes / Заметки
Written by Debreczeny, Paul   

Pushkinian Elements in Isaak levitan's Painting "By the Mill-Pond"

Paul Debreczeny

 

In December 1884, when Isaak Levitan was twenty-four and still had difficulties earning a living as a painter, his former teacher Vasilii Polenov arranged for him and a number of other young artists to work as designers for a private opera house established by the wealthy patron of the arts Savva Mamontov. At first a somewhat amateurish enterprise, Mamontov's opera soon grew into a serious aspect of Moscow's cultural landscape. It was here that Fedor Shaliapin, one of Russia's most famous singers, was to find his true artistic identity. Up to that time theater design had been left to little-known craftsmen. Mamontov, falling in with the practice of Art Nouveau, employed outstanding painters and made the decor as integral a part of the performance as singing, acting, and music. Levitan participated in designing stage sets for Alexander Dargomyzhskii's Water-Nymph (Rusalka), based on Pushkin's verse drama, for Nikolai Rimskii-Korsakov's Snow-Maiden (Snegurochka), Mikhail Glinka's Life for the Tsar (Zhizn' za tsaria), and Charles Gounod's Faust. For The Water-Nymph, which was put on as the theater's debut performance in January 1885, he painted the backdrop of the water-nymphs' underground palace. This revival of Dargomyzhskii's opera, written in 1855, met with great success; people went around singing the arias based on Pushkin's verses. It is characteristic that the students going to the red light district in Anton Chekhov's 1886 story "An Attack of Nerves" sing, ironically, the Prince's words in the last scene, "Here once upon a time I met with love, / A passionate and freely given love.”[1]

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«Музы наши сестры» (Пушкин и Вяземский) Print E-mail
Volume 06-07 (2003-04) - Vols. 6-7: Notes / Заметки
Written by Shokina, O. Iu.   

«Музы наши сестры» (Пушкин и Вяземский)

O. Ю. Шокина

Тема «Пушкин и Вяземский»—одна из самых интересных тем в пушкинистике и в литературоведении вообще. Многие исследователи обращались к этой теме, и интерес к ней не случаен и закономерен.

 

Петр Андреевич Вяземский (1792–1878), поэт и критик, был одним из ближайших друзей Пушкина на протяжении многих лет. Познакомившись в 1816 году, они могли долго не встречаться, но не теряли друг друга из виду, общаясь, если не лично, то в письмах. Кроме взаимной симпатии, их связывала и литературная деятельность; более того, «не лишено вероятия утверждение, что стихотворения В<яземского> влияли в известной мере на выработку поэтики Пушкина.»[1]

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