Ivan Aivazovsky
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky (July 29, 1817 – May 5, 1900) was a Russian painter of Armenian descent living and working in Crimea, most famous for his seascapes, which constitute more than half of his paintings.
Ivan Aivazovsky Online Art Gallery
- Along the Coast
- Bracing the Waves
- Breakers on the Crimean Coast
- Brig Mercury Attacked by Two Turkish Ships
- Calm Waters
- Caucasus
- Clouds Gathering Over Harbour
- Coast at sunset
- Coast by Moonlight
- Colombus Sailing From Palos
- Crash
- Crimea
- Distributing Supplies
- Fishing Boats in a Harbor
- Full Moon Over the Ayu Dag
- Ice on the Dniepr
- Landscape with Windmills
- Malta Valetto Harbour
- Maria in Storm
- Meeting of the Brig Mercury with the Russian Squadron after the Defeat of two Turkish Battleships
- Mercuri
- Moonlight in the Ayu Dag
- Moonlit Night
- Moonlit Night A Bathing Hut in Feodosia
- Mount Ararat
- Mountain Village Gunib in Daghestan.View from the East
- Noctural Voyage
- On the Island of Crete
- On the Island of Rhodes
- Reval (Tallinn)
- Sailing Through the Haze
- Seashore
- Seashore.Calm.
- Ship on Hight Sea
- Shipping off the Island of Ischia
- Shipwreck
- Storm
- Stormy Sea
- Sunset at Sea
- Sunset Over Constantinople
- The Arrival of Columbus Flotilla
- The Battle in the Chios Channel
- The Battle of Chesme
- The Bay of Naples by Moonlight
- The Bay of Yalta
- The Billow
- The Black Sea
- The Caucasian Range from the Sea
- The Caucasus
- The Coast at Amalfi
- The Farewell
- The Great Roads at Kronstadt
- The Mary Caught in a Storm
- The Ninth Wave
- The Rainbow
- The Relief Ship
- The Rescue
- The Return
- The Roads at Kronstadt
- The Sea (Koktebel)
- The Survivor
- The Survivors
- The Tenth Wave
- The Varangians on the Dnieper
- The Wrath of the Seas
- Towers on the Rock Near Bosporus
- Travellers in Gurzuf
- Ukrainian Landscape at Night
- View of Constantinople by Moonlight
- View of Odessa by Moonlight
- View of Reval
- View of the Ayu Dag Crimea
- View of the Cost Near St Petersburg
- View of the Leander Tower in Constantinople
- View of the Sea by Moonlight
- View of the Sea from the Mountains at Sunset (Crimea)
- View of Tiflis
- Windmill on the Sea Coast
- Winter Landscape
Ivan Aivazovsky Biogarphy
Aivazovsky was born in the town of Feodosiya (Theodosia), Crimea (Russian Empire) (modern-day Ukraine) to a poor Armenian family. His parents' family name was Aivazian. Some of the artist's paintings bear a signature, in Armenian letters, "Hovhannes Aivazian" (Հովհաննես Այվազյան). His talent as an artist earned him sponsorship and entry to the Simferopol gymnasium №1 and later the St.Petersburg Academy of Arts, which he graduated with a gold medal. Earning awards for his early landscapes and seascapes, he went on to paint a series of portraits of Crimean coastal towns before travelling throughout Europe. In later life, his paintings of naval scenes earned him a long-standing commission from the Russian Navy stationed in the Black Sea.
In 1845, Aivazovsky went to İstanbul upon the invitation of Sultan Abdülmecid I, a city he was to travel to eight times between 1845–1890. During his long sojourn in İstanbul, Aivazovsky was commissioned for a number of paintings as a court painter by the Ottoman Sultans Abdülmecid, Abdulaziz and Abdulhamid, 30 of which are currently on display in the Ottoman Imperial Palace, the Dolmabahce Museum and many other museums in Turkey. His works are also found in dozens of museums throughout Russia and the former Soviet republics, including the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, and the Aivazovsky Art Gallery in Feodosiya, Ukraine. The office of Turkey's Foreign Minister, Abdullah Gül, has Aivasovsky's paintings on the wall.
At 31, Aivazovsky married Julia Graves, an English governess in St. Petersburg. They had four daughters. The marriage was dissolved, and at the age of 65, Aivazovsky, married Anna Boornazian, a young Armenian widow from Theodosia.
Aivazovsky was deeply affected by the Hamidian massacres of Armenians in Asia Minor in 1895, painting a number of works on the subject such as "The Expulsion of the Turkish Ship," and "The Armenian Massacres at Trevizond." and renouncing a medal which had been awarded to him in İstanbul. He spent his last years in Feodosia where he supplied the town with water from his own estate, opened an art school, began the first archaeological excavations in the region and built a historical museum. Due to his efforts a commercial port was established at Feodosiya and linked to the railway network. Aivasovsky died in Feodosiya in 1900.
Aivazovsky is best known for his seascapes and coastal scenes. His technique and imagination in depicting the shimmering play of light on the waves and seafoam is especially admired, and gives his seascapes a romantic yet realistic quality that echoes the work of English watercolorist J. M. W. Turner and Russian painter Sylvester Shchedrin. Especially effective is his ability to depict diffuse sunlight and moonlight, sometimes coming from behind clouds, sometimes coming through a fog, with almost transparent layers of paint. A series of paintings of naval battles painted in the 1840s brought his dramatic skills to the fore, with the flames of burning ships reflected in water and clouds. He also painted landscapes, including scenes of peasant life in Ukraine and city life in İstanbul. Some critics have called his paintings from İstanbul Orientalist, and others feel the hundreds of seascapes can be repetitive and melodramatic.
Aivazovsky became the most prolific Russian Armenian painter of his time. He left over 6,000 works at his death in 1900. The funds earned during his successful career as an artist enabled him to open an art school and gallery in his hometown of Feodosiya.
As of 2006, Aivazovsky's works have been auctioned for as much as $3,200,000, and his international reputation continues to grow. On June 14, 2007 his painting "American Shipping off the Rock of Gibraltar" sold for 2,710,000 pounds, "the highest price paid at auction for Aivazovsky". He is also said to be the most forged of all Russian Armenian painters.
He is in the highest category "1 - an artist of the world fame, tested with time (for no less than a century)" in "United Artists Rating".
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