Video: The dream woman in the paintings of Konstantin Razumov
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
We always associate eternal femininity with Blok's poems. And from the pictures Konstantin Razumov lines from Blok appear in the memory. Unites them dream woman, which everyone sings in his own way. Konstantin Razumov in his paintings seems to return to the same image in order to preserve the unique features dear to his heart. However, the dream takes the artist to another time, so you will not see a single portrait of a modern woman.
Konstantin Razumov was born in 1974 in the city of Zarinsk. He studied painting first at the Novoaltaisk Art School, then at the Russian Academy of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. Currently, the artist lives and works in Moscow.
The formation of Konstantin Razumov as an artist was influenced by many styles, but in the end he gave preference to the combination of realism and impressionism. This can be seen in any of his paintings: he paints a portrait realistically, but the background usually deprives of specifics and performs in a technique characteristic of impressionism.
The artist is especially fond of portraits of women - he has a great many of them. However, he does not portray modern women, as, for example, Pascal Pratt or Ana Teresa Fernandez do. The woman in the paintings of Konstantin Razumov is a dream woman who does not give the artist peace of mind. She came from another time - from the last century. However, it is impossible to determine the exact time or space: impressionistic features deprive images of being bound to a specific place and time. Sometimes Paris is guessed in the paintings, but this is more a collective image of the city than the real one.
The dream woman in the paintings of Konstantin Razumov is charming, sophisticated and feminine. And it is completely unlike modern young ladies. The artist paints the features of this woman extremely realistically. In fact, this is the same beautiful lady who moves from one picture to another. However, even a realistically written image, but placed in a ghostly reality, seems incredible, illusory.
Recommended:
Why Wall Street Billionaires Dream of Dressing Up as a Woman for the Secret Society of Kappa Beta Phi
The drama series Billions, which tells about the life of the American financial elite, has attracted the attention of millions of viewers around the world. And against the backdrop of the events unfolding in the film in the last season, an entertaining storyline surfaced. One of the heroes dreamed of becoming a member of a secret elite society, and was ready for literally anything for this. The most interesting thing is that this society actually exists. However, members of Kappa Beta Phi prefer not to advertise their involvement in the
"A sultry woman, a poet's dream!": How Natalya Krachkovskaya became the best Madame Gritsatsuyeva, and how it turned out for her
On November 24, the Honored Artist of Russia, the famous theater and film actress Natalya Krachkovskaya could have turned 78, but in March 2016 she passed away. Her most striking role was the image of Madame Gritsatsuyeva in Leonid Gaidai's film "Twelve Chairs". But despite the fact that this role brought Krachkovskaya fame and success, she became a stumbling block in the further development of her film career
Look for a woman: the zigzags of fate of the most popular Georgian woman in Soviet cinema, Sofiko Chiaureli
On May 21, the famous Georgian actress Sofiko Chiaureli would have turned 86 years old, but in 2008 she passed away. They say that none of the actresses of the Soviet cinema has had so many awards. She was adored both in Georgia and abroad, Sergei Parajanov called her his muse. According to legend, Georgian girls still have a prayer in which they ask: "Lord, give me a happy life and make me as beautiful as Sofiko Chiaureli!" However, her whole life was covered with legends
Anatoly Papanov and his Nadezhda: "I am a Monogamous woman - one woman and one theater"
Everything in his life was not at all the same as in the movies. Only love was so big and bright that it was just right to write a novel about it. Anatoly Papanov all his life, until his last breath, loved one and only woman, his Nadezhda. They both went through the war. As corny as it may sound, they both looked death in the eye. And maybe that's why they had a thirst for life and a thirst for love
The story of a Parisian woman from Claude Monet's painting "Woman with an umbrella" is fictional, but still relevant today
Another author's essay is devoted to the painting by the French impressionist Claude Monet "Woman with an umbrella". And although the picture was painted at the end of the 19th century, the story that it evokes could very well happen today