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"Portrait of My Wife" Original Oil Painting by Engels Kozlov Circa 1969

Mr. Marin

£7,515.45
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SKU:
ORIG20-0310
Availability:
Approx. 3 Days
Width:
34"
Height:
46"
Condition:
Vintage
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Original oil painting by Engels Kozlov.

The piece measures 34" x 46" overall.

Artist signature in the upper-left corner. 

Closed corner, gilded frame handcrafted by Richard Tobey.

This painting comes from our collection of original Soviet-era oil paintings. 

The history of Russian Impressionist painting is the tale of an extraordinary movement in the art of the twentieth century.  The concept of "Soviet Social Realism," a.k.a. Russian impressionism, emphasized the social role of art; it insisted on the superiority of content over form and required a wholesale return to traditional skills, regarding history and European art from the Renaissance as a living source of inspiration.

In the ensuing years, artists struggled between their duty to reflect the ideals of the State and developing their own stylistic repertoire as party leaders demanded that art should be "understood" by the average person. Somehow, Russian artists managed to perform a delicate balancing act between the requirements of "accepted" working class art by painting poetic scenes in which the worker, farmer, or monumental Russian industry are the primary subjects.

With the death of Stalin in 1953, the darker academic pallet began to lighten and the need to conform to rigid subjects eased. This was the beginning of what is known as the "Severe Style" of Social Realism. The fall of the Soviet Empire took with it the last of the social realist art form. By 1990, all that was left of Russian Impressionism was a body of work created in the five previous decades by a few masters and their progeny.

About Engels Kozlov:

Engels Vasilevich Kozlov was born in Troitsko-Pechersk, Komi Autonomous Republic in 1924. He picked up his studies at the Childrens' Arts School of Syktyvkar in the late 1930s. Kozlov attended Yaroslavl Art College from 1947-1949, the Leningrad Art College from 1949-1950, and then the Repin Institute from 1950-1956 (Leningrad's premier fine arts institute).