Nikolai Kuznetsov | |
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Nikolai Kuznetsov (before 1914)
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Born |
Nikolai Dmitriyevich Kuzentsov December 2, 1850 Stepanovka, Kherson Governorate, The Russian Empire |
Died | March 2, 1929 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina |
(aged 78)
Occupation | Artist and art teacher |
Nikolai Dmitriyevich Kuznetsov (Russian: Николай Дмитриевич Кузнецов; 2 December 1850 - 2 March 1929) was a Russian painter and art professor at the Saint Petersburg Academy of Fine Arts. His work consists primarily of portraits and genre scenes.
He was the son of a wealthy landowner and began school in Odessa, where his artistic talent was discovered and he began taking lessons at the local drawing school. From 1876 to 1880, he attended the Imperial Academy of Arts, where he studied with Pavel Chistyakov. He was considered to be a good student, but often left the Academy to paint at the family estate. At this time, he successfully defied his family's wishes and married a working-class woman who was employed there.
Following graduation, he was a frequent exhibitor throughout Russia and Ukraine and received numerous commissions. Among his portrait sitters were Peter Tchaikovsky and Élie Metchnikoff. During this time, he was a frequent visitor to the Abramtsevo Colony. Because of his large, wrestler's physique, he often served as a model for other painters.
After an accident in 1889, he had to walk on crutches, so he worked entirely in a studio at his estate, which became a meeting place for the creative community, including figures such as Fyodor Chaliapin, in addition to artists. In 1893, somewhat recovered, he moved his studio to Odessa and began exhibiting. Two years later, he was offered a professorship at the Imperial Academy, where he taught battle painting, but left in 1897 to return to Odessa. In 1900, he became an Academician and a member of the Peredvizhniki. That same year, he exhibited at the Exposition Universelle in Paris. Later, he travelled extensively to exhibitions throughout Europe.
In 1920, during the Russian Civil War, as the White Army retreated, he and his family emigrated to Yugoslavia, eventually settling in Sarajevo, where he died in 1929.