Vasiliev Konstantin Alekseevich. Artist Konstantin Vasiliev


Konstantin Alekseevich Vasiliev (09/03/1942 - 10/29/1976)- Russian artist, widely known for his works on military and epic-mythological themes.

The creative heritage of Konstantin Vasiliev, who chose the pseudonym “CONSTANTIN VELIKOROSS”, is very multifaceted and diverse, numbering more than 400 works of painting and graphics.

In addition to the works on the subjects indicated above, it contains portraits, landscapes, realistic compositions, paintings battle genre. Deep symbolism of painting combined with the original color scheme canvases - a wide use of red and silver-gray colors and their shades - make the paintings of Konstantin Vasiliev recognizable and original.

Vasiliev addressed folk art: Russian songs, epics, fairy tales, Scandinavian and Irish sagas, to “Eddic poetry”. Created works on mythological subjects, heroic themes Slavic and Scandinavian epics, about the Great Patriotic War.

Biography. From the book by Anatoly Doronin “Rus’ Magic Palette”

To understand inner world person, we must certainly touch his roots. Kostya's father was born in 1897 into the family of a St. Petersburg worker. By the will of fate, he became a participant in three wars and spent his entire life working in management positions in industry. Kostya's mother was almost twenty years old younger than father and belonged to the family of the great Russian painter I.I. Shishkina.

Just before the war, the young couple lived in Maykop. They were eagerly awaiting their first child. But a month before his birth, Alexey Alekseevich went to partisan detachment: The Germans were approaching Maykop. Klavdia Parmenovna was unable to evacuate. On August 8, 1942, the city was occupied, and on September 3, Konstantin Vasiliev entered the world. Needless to say, what hardships and hardships befell the young mother and baby. Klavdiya Parmenovna and her son were taken to the Gestapo, then released, trying to reveal possible connections with the partisans. The life of the Vasilievs was literally hanging by a thread, and only a rapid offensive Soviet troops saved them. Maykop was liberated on February 3, 1943.

After the war, the family moved to Kazan, and in 1949 - for permanent residence in the village of Vasilyevo. And this was no accident. A passionate hunter and fisherman, Alexey Alekseevich, often traveling outside the city, somehow ended up in this village, fell in love with it and decided to move here forever. Later Kostya will reflect unearthly beauty these places in their numerous landscapes.

Young Kostya was struck by the beauty of these places. She was special here, created great river. The right bank rises in a blue haze, almost steep, overgrown with forest; you can see distant white monastery on the slope, to the right, is the fabulous Sviyazhsk, all located on Table Mountain with its temples and churches, shops and houses, rising above the wide meadows in the floodplain of Sviyaga and the Volga. And very far away, already beyond Sviyaga, on its high bank, the bell tower and church of the village of Tikhy Ples are barely visible. Closer to the village there is a river, a wide water stream. And the water is deep, slow and cool, and the pools are bottomless, shady and cold.

In the spring, in April-May, the flood flooded this entire expanse from ridge to ridge, and then to the south of the village water with bushy islands was visible for many kilometers, and distant Sviyazhsk itself turned into an island. By June, the water receded, revealing the entire expanse of flooded meadows, generously watered and fertilized with silt, leaving behind cheerful streams and blue overgrown lakes, densely populated with burbot, tench, loaches, bee-eaters and frogs. The approaching summer heat with irrepressible force drove thick, juicy, sweet grasses out of the ground, and along the banks of ditches, streams and lakes it drove up and out the bushes of willow grass, currants, and rose hips.

The meadows on the left bank near the ridge gave way to light linden and oak forests, which to this day, interspersed with fields, stretch to the north for many kilometers and gradually turn into coniferous forest-taiga.

Kostya differed from his peers in that he was not interested in toys, did not run around much with other children, but always tinkered with paints, pencils and paper. His father often took him fishing and hunting, and Kostya drew the river, boats, his father, the forest apiary, game, Orlik’s dog, and in general everything that pleased the eye and captured his imagination. Some of these drawings have survived.

Parents helped the development of his abilities as best they could: tactfully and unobtrusively, while protecting taste, they selected books and reproductions, introduced Kostya to music, and took him to museums in Kazan, Moscow, Leningrad, when the opportunity and opportunity presented themselves.

Kostya’s first favorite book is “The Tale of the Three Bogatyrs.” Then the boy became acquainted with the painting by V.M. Vasnetsov “Bogatyrs”, and a year later he copied it with colored pencils. On my father's birthday I gave him a painting as a gift. The similarity between the heroes was striking. Inspired by his parents’ praise, the boy copied “The Knight at the Crossroads,” also with colored pencils. Then I made a pencil drawing from Antokolsky’s sculpture “Ivan the Terrible.” His first landscape sketches have survived: a stump strewn with yellow autumn leaves, hut in the forest.

The parents saw that the boy was gifted and could not live without drawing, and therefore more than once thought about the teachers’ advice - to send their son to an art school. But where, to which class, after which class? There was no such school either in the village or in Kazan. Chance helped.

In 1954, the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper placed an advertisement that the Moscow Secondary art school at the Institute named after V.I. Surikov accepts children gifted in the field of drawing. His parents immediately decided that this was the kind of school Kostya needed - he showed his ability to draw very early. The school accepted five to six nonresident children per year. Kostya was one of them, passing all exams with “excellent marks”.

The Moscow secondary art school was located in the quiet Lavrushinsky lane of the old Zamoskvorechye, opposite Tretyakovskaya galleries. There were only three similar schools in the country: in addition to Moscow, there were also in Leningrad and Kyiv. But the MSHS was revered beyond competition, if only because it existed at the Surikov Institute, and had the Tretyakov Gallery as a training base.

Of course, Kostya did not wait for the day when the whole class, led by the teacher, went to the Tretyakov Gallery. He went to the gallery alone as soon as he was enrolled in school. The personal interest inherent in life, on the one hand, and the living active force pictures, on the other, collided in his excited mind. Which picture should I go to? No, not to this one, where the night sky and the dark shadow of the house, and not to the one where the sandy seashore and scow in the bay are, and not to the one where the female figures are depicted...

Kostya went further and heard a call within himself when he saw three bright, familiar figures on Vasnetsov’s large, half-wall canvas “Bogatyrs”. The boy was delighted to meet the source of his recent inspiration: after all, he studied the reproduction of this painting centimeter by centimeter, looked at it countless times, and then carefully redrew it. So this is what it is - the original!

The boy stared at the determined faces of the heroes, the shiny, authentic weapons, the metallic chain mail, the shaggy horse manes. Where did the great Vasnetsov get all this from? From books, of course! And all this steppe distance, this air before the fight - also from books? What about the wind? After all, you can feel the wind in the picture! Kostya became agitated, now revealing the feeling of wind in front of the original. Indeed, the horses’ manes, and even the blades of grass, are moving in the wind.

Having recovered from the first overwhelming impressions of the giant city, the boy did not get lost in the unfamiliar space. Tretyakov and Pushkin Museum, Grand Theatre and the conservatory - this became the main gateway to the world for him classical art. With childish seriousness, he reads “Treatise on Painting” by Leonardo da Vinci, and then studies the paintings of this great master and “Napoleon” by the Soviet historian Evgeniy Tarle, with all the fervor of his young soul he immerses himself in the music of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Mozart and Bach. And the powerful, almost materialized spirituality of these giants is fixed in his consciousness with crystals of precious rock.

Quiet, calm Kostya Vasiliev always behaved independently. The level of his work, declared from the first days of his studies, gave him the right to do this. Not only the boys, but even the teachers were amazed by Kostina’s watercolors. As a rule, these were landscapes, with their own clearly distinctive themes. Young artist I didn’t take something large, catchy, bright, but always found some touch in nature that you could pass by and not notice: a twig, a flower, a blade of grass. Moreover, Kostya performed these sketches using minimal pictorial means, sparingly selecting colors and playing with subtle color relationships. This reveals the boy’s character and his approach to life.

Miraculously, one of his amazing productions has survived - a still life with plaster head. Having almost completed the work, Kostya accidentally spilled glue on it; He immediately removed the cardboard from the easel and threw it into the trash bin. So this watercolor, like many others, would have disappeared forever if not for Kolya Charugin, also a boarding school boy who studied a class later and always watched Vasiliev’s work with delight. He saved and kept this still life among his most valuable works for thirty years.

All the components of this still life were tastefully selected by someone from the school's collection of objects: as a background - a medieval plush caftan, on the table - a plaster head of a boy, an old book in a worn leather binding and with some kind of rag bookmark, and next to it - not yet wilted rose flower.

Kostya did not have to study for long - only two years. His father died and he had to return home. He continued his studies at the Kazan Art School, entering the second year immediately. Kostya’s drawings did not resemble the student’s work. He made any sketch with a smooth and almost continuous movement of his hand. Vasiliev made many lively and expressive drawings. It's a pity that most of them have been lost. Of the surviving ones, the most interesting is his self-portrait, painted at the age of fifteen. A smooth thin line draws the contour of the head. With one movement of a pencil, the shape of the nose, the curve of the eyebrows are outlined, the mouth is slightly outlined, the chiseled curve of the auricle, and the curls at the forehead. At the same time, the oval of the face, the shape of the eyes and something else subtle are reminiscent of Sandro Botticelli’s “Madonna of the Pomegranate”.

A typical surviving small still life from that period is “Kulik”, painted in oil. It is a clear imitation Dutch masters– the same strict gloomy tonality, filigree painted texture of objects. On the edge of the table, on a rough canvas tablecloth, lies the hunter's catch, and next to it is a glass of water, apricot kernel. Transparent well water, a still-drying bone, and a bird left for a while - everything is so natural that the viewer can easily mentally expand the scope of the picture and complete in his imagination some everyday situation accompanying the artist’s production.

By this period of his life, Vasiliev could write in any manner, for anyone. He was a master of the craft. But he had to find his own way and, like any artist, he wanted to say his own word. He grew up and looked for himself.

In the spring of 1961, Konstantin graduated from Kazan art school. Thesis work there were sketches of the scenery for Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera “The Snow Maiden”. The defense was brilliant. The work was rated “excellent”, but unfortunately has not been preserved.

In a painful search for himself, Vasiliev “got sick” with abstractionism and surrealism. It was interesting to try styles and trends, led by such fashionable names, like Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore, Salvador Dali. Vasiliev quite quickly comprehended the creative credo of each of them and created new ones. interesting developments in their key. Plunging with his usual seriousness into the development of new directions, Vasiliev creates a whole series of interesting surreal works, such as “String”, “Ascension”, “Apostle”. However, Vasiliev himself was quickly disappointed by the formal search, which was based on naturalism.

“The only thing that surrealism is interesting about,” he shared with friends, “is its purely external effectiveness, the ability to openly express in a light form momentary aspirations and thoughts, but not deep-seated feelings.”

Drawing an analogy with music, he compared this direction with a jazz arrangement of a symphonic piece. In any case, delicate subtle soul Vasilyeva did not want to put up with a certain frivolity of the forms of surrealism: the permissiveness of the expression of feelings and thoughts, their imbalance and nakedness. The artist felt his inner inconsistency, the destruction of something important that is in realistic art, the meaning, the purpose that it carries.

The fascination with expressionism, which related to non-objective painting and claimed greater depth, lasted somewhat longer. Here, the pillars of abstractionism declared, for example, that the master, without the help of objects, depicts not the melancholy on a person’s face, but the melancholy itself. That is, for the artist there is an illusion of much deeper self-expression. This period includes such works as: “Quartet”, “The Queen’s Sadness”, “Vision”, “Icon of Memory”, “Music of Eyelashes”.

Trying to comprehend the essence of phenomena and suffer through a general structure of thoughts for future works, Konstantin began landscape sketches. What a variety of landscapes he created during his short life creative life! Undoubtedly, Vasiliev created landscapes that are unique in their beauty, but some new strong thought was tormented and beating in his mind: “ Inner strength all living things, strength of spirit - this is what an artist should express!” Yes, beauty, greatness of spirit - that’s what will be the main thing for Konstantin from now on! And “Northern” was born eagle”, “Man with an owl”, “Waiting”, “At someone else’s window”, “Northern Legend” and many other works that became the embodiment of a special “Vasilievsky” style that cannot be confused with anything.

Konstantin belonged to the rarest category of people who are invariably accompanied by inspiration, but they do not feel it, because for them it is a familiar state. It’s as if they live from birth to death in one breath, in increased tone. Konstantin loves nature all the time, loves people all the time, loves life all the time. Why does he watch, why does he catch his eye, the movement of a cloud, a leaf. He is constantly attentive to everything. This attention, this love, this desire for everything good was Vasiliev’s inspiration. And this was his whole life.

But it is unfair, of course, to claim that the life of Konstantin Vasiliev was devoid of inescapable human joys. One day (Konstantin was seventeen years old at the time), his sister Valentina, returning from school, said that a new girl had come to them in the eighth grade - a beautiful girl with green, slanting eyes and long, shoulder-length hair. She came to live in the resort village because of her sick brother. Konstantin offered to bring her for posing.

When fourteen-year-old Lyudmila Chugunova entered the house, Kostya suddenly became confused, began to fuss, and began to move the easel from place to place. The first session lasted a long time. In the evening Kostya went to accompany Lyuda home. A gang of guys who came their way brutally beat him: immediately and unconditionally, Lyuda was recognized as the most beautiful girl in the village. But could beatings cool the artist’s ardent heart? He fell in love with the girl. I painted her portraits every day. Lyudmila recounted her romantic dreams to him, and he made color illustrations for them. They both didn't like yellow(maybe just youthful hostility to the symbol of betrayal?), and one day, after drawing blue sunflowers, Kostya asked: “Do you understand what I wrote? If not, better be silent, don’t say anything..."

Konstantin introduced Luda to music and literature. They seemed to understand each other from half a word, from half a glance. One day Lyudmila came to see Konstantin with a friend. At that time, he and his friend Tolya Kuznetsov were sitting in the twilight, listening intently classical music and did not react at all to those who entered. For Luda’s friend, such inattention seemed insulting, and she dragged Luda away by the hand.

After this, the girl was afraid of meetings for a long time, feeling that she had offended Kostya. Her whole being was drawn to him, and when she became completely unbearable, she approached his house and I sat on the porch for hours. But friendly relations interrupted.

Several years have passed. Once on the train Konstantin was returning from Kazan with Anatoly. Having met Lyudmila in the carriage, he approached her and invited her: “I have an exhibition opening in Zelenodolsk.” Come. There is also your portrait.

A ringing, joyful hope awoke in her soul. Of course she will come! But at home my mother categorically forbade me: “You won’t go! Why run around somewhere, you already have plenty of his drawings and portraits!”

The exhibition closed, and suddenly Konstantin himself came to her house. Having collected all his drawings, he tore them up in front of Lyudmila and silently left. Forever…

Several works of semi-abstract style - the memory of youthful quest pictorial forms and media dedicated to Lyudmila Chugunova have been preserved in the collections of Blinov and Pronin.

Warm relations at one time connected Konstantin with Lena Aseeva, graduate of the Kazan Conservatory. Lena's oil portrait is successfully demonstrated at all the artist's posthumous exhibitions. Elena successfully completed educational institution in piano and, naturally, had a great understanding of music. This circumstance especially attracted Konstantin to the girl. One day he made up his mind and proposed to her. The girl replied that she had to think...

Well, who among us, mere mortals, can imagine what passions boil and disappear without a trace in the soul? great artist, what sometimes insignificant circumstances can radically change the intensity of his emotions? Of course, he did not know what answer Lena came to him with the next day, and, apparently, he was no longer interested in this, since he did not immediately receive the desired answer.

Many will say that this is not serious and that important issues are not resolved this way. And they will, of course, be right. But let's remember that artists, as a rule, are easily vulnerable and proud people. Unfortunately, the failure that befell Konstantin in this matchmaking played another fatal role in his fate.

Already a mature man, at the age of about thirty, he fell in love with Lena Kovalenko, who also received musical education. An intelligent, subtle, charming girl, Lena disturbed Konstantin’s heart. A strong, real feeling awoke in him again, as in his youth, but the fear of being rejected, of encountering misunderstanding, did not allow him to arrange his happiness... But the fact that his only chosen one before last days life remained painting, one can discern the special purpose of the artist.

There is, undoubtedly, objective reasons. One of them is selfless mother's love Klavdia Parmenovna, who was afraid to let her son out of native nest. Sometimes she could look at the bride too meticulously, with a critical eye, and then express her opinion to her son, to which Konstantin reacted very sensitively.

Extraordinary talent, rich spiritual world and the education he received allowed Konstantin Vasiliev to leave his incomparable mark on Russian painting. His paintings are easily recognizable. He may not be recognized at all, some of his works are controversial, but once having seen Vasiliev’s works, one can no longer remain indifferent to them. I would like to quote an excerpt from Vladimir Soloukhin’s story “Continuation of Time”: -... “Konstantin Vasiliev?! - the artists protested. - But this is unprofessional. Painting has its own laws, its own rules. And this is illiterate from the point of view of painting. He is an amateur..., an amateur, and all his paintings are amateurish daub. There, not a single picturesque spot corresponds to another picturesque spot! - But excuse me, if this painting is not even art at all, then how and why does it affect people?.. - Maybe it has poetry, its own thoughts, symbols, images, its own view of the world - we don’t argue, but there is no professional painting there. - Yes, thoughts and symbols cannot influence people on their own in their naked form. These would only be slogans, abstract signs. And poetry cannot exist in an unembodied form. And on the contrary, if the picture is super-literate and professional, if in it every pictorial spot, as you say, is correlated with another pictorial spot, but there is no poetry, no thought, no symbol, no own view of the world, if the picture does not touch no mind, no heart, boring, sad or simply dead, spiritually dead, then why do I need this competent relationship of parts. The main thing here, apparently, is the spirituality of Konstantin Vasiliev. It was the spirituality that people felt..."

Kostya died under very strange and mysterious circumstances. Official version— was hit together with a friend at a railway crossing by a passing train. This happened on October 29, 1976. Kostya's relatives and friends do not agree with this - there are too many incomprehensible coincidences associated with his death. This misfortune shocked many. They buried Konstantin in a birch grove, in the very forest where he loved to be.

Fate, which is so often evil towards great people from the outside, always treats with care what is internal and deep in them. The thought that is to live does not die with its carriers, even when death overtakes them unexpectedly and accidentally. And the artist will live as long as his paintings are alive.

"Northern Eagle"

"Marshal G. Zhukov"

MP3 player for watching with music

Man with an owl

On Kalinov Bridge

Volga and Mikula

Fight with the Serpent

Ilya Muromets and Gol Kabatskaya


Sadko and the Lord of the Sea

Semargl

Eupraxia


Starry sky


Alyosha Popovich and the beautiful girl

Russian knight


Dobrynya's fight with the snake


Avdotya-Ryazanochka

Fires are burning



Ilya Muromsets shooting at churches


Northern eagle


Yaroslavna's lament




Accidental meeting



Mermaid



Farewell of a Slav


Sviyazhsk



Konstantin Vasiliev was born on September 3, 1942 in the city of Maykop Krasnodar region. His father Alexey Alekseevich is from St. Petersburg, a participant three wars(1st World War, civilian - fought in the Chapaev division, 2nd World War - partisan, communist), engineer, great connoisseur and lover of nature, admirer of literature.

Mother Claudia Parmenovna Shishkina - on the side of her mother from the Saratov peasants.

On August 8, 1942, Maikop was occupied by the Nazis, and my father joined the partisans. But already in February 1943 the city was liberated, and my father returned. In 1946, the family moved to Kazan, then to Vasilyevo, thirty kilometers from the city, opposite the place where the Sviyaga flows into the Volga. Virgin forests, river expanses... Kostya goes hunting and fishing with his father. These were, apparently, unforgettable moments when the soul was open to everything wonderful in the world. He started drawing early. Mother said about him: “He was born with a pencil in his hands.” Parents are seriously thinking about further development talent given by fate to their son.

Having passed the exams perfectly, Konstantin Vasiliev becomes a student at the Moscow Art Boarding School at the Institute. Surikov Academy of Arts of the USSR. From 1954 to 1957 he lived and studied in Moscow. These years are filled with impressions from visual arts, music, theaters.

Studied at the Kazan Art School (1957-1961). Worked as a drawing and drawing teacher in high school, graphic designer. Vasiliev’s creative heritage is extensive: paintings, graphics, sketches, illustrations, sketches for painting a church in Omsk. Works from the early 1960s. marked by the influence of surrealism and abstract expressionism (“String”, 1963; “Abstract Compositions”, 1963). In the late 1960s gt. abandoned formalistic searches and worked in a realistic manner.

Vasiliev turned to folk art: Russian songs, epics, fairy tales, Scandinavian and Irish sagas, and “Eddic poetry.” He created works on mythological subjects, heroic themes of Slavic and Scandinavian epics, and about the Great Patriotic War.

Konstantin Vasiliev passed away at the age of 34, as if confirming the ominous theory about the connection between genius and the inevitable early death. The artist died strangely; there were even four versions of his death: on October 29, 1976, he was beaten by hooligans on an empty train, thrown out of the train while moving, hacked to death with an ax, and hit by a train at Antropshino station. The prosecutor's office did not initiate a criminal case, there was no investigation, and the circumstances and reasons for the death of Konstantin Vasilyev will probably remain a mystery.

The artist left behind about 400 paintings, most of his creative heritage - 82 canvases - was kept in the museum. It is difficult to envy the artist’s fate. Unrecognized and persecuted during his lifetime, he painted as if possessed, as if he felt that he would soon leave. If suddenly an extravagant buyer appeared, interested unrecognized genius, the artist simply measured his work diagonally with a school ruler and charged the stunned collector a ruble per centimeter. And only many years later will people notice that Vasiliev’s paintings give rise to the so-called "Stendhal syndrome" , and visitors to exhibitions and the museum will lose consciousness from the insane energy that the master put into his canvases. His paintings are incredibly popular and are valued at many millions of dollars. Over 20 years, more than fifty personal exhibitions took place in Russian cities, as well as in Bulgaria, the former Yugoslavia, and Spain.

In 1988, Konstantin Vasiliev was posthumously awarded the Komsomol Prize of Tatarstan. Musa Jalil for a series of paintings about the Great Patriotic War.

In 1996 and 1998, two museums were opened and Art Gallery Konstantin Vasiliev.

The museum in Moscow, where 82 paintings by the artist were stored, was created with great love fans of Vasiliev's work. These are real Russian patriots, led by Anatoly Ivanovich Doronin, those who love creativity Konstantin Vasiliev and dedicated to their work.

To create the museum, the Moscow government spent three years knocking on the thresholds of the Moscow government. Finally, they rented out a ruined mansion, of which only three walls remained. Then, for almost ten years, they restored it, with their own hands, with their own money. And so, in 1998, the museum opened. But land in Moscow is a tasty morsel, there are many who want to take it away; on this territory, where the museum is located, it was planned to build 2 high rise buildings. Since 2005, attacks on the museum began - raiders, courts, fake documents, signatures...

Before 15 paintings from the Konstantin Vasiliev Museum were to be transferred to the ownership of the artist’s sister, the Club meeting decided to conduct an examination of all the paintings to establish their authenticity. Some law firm"Private Law" offered its assistance in transporting and placing the paintings on the territory of the closed security enterprise "Voskhod". However, then the paintings strangely disappeared.

That same night the museum was set on fire. On the night of September 21, 2009, a fire occurred in the Vasiliev Museum building.

At about 10 p.m., one of the two guards in the building woke up and smelled gasoline. A few minutes later the room began to fill with smoke. The gas boiler room was on fire. He woke up the second security guard and they, calling the firefighters, tried to extinguish the fire themselves. However, the fire spread through the ventilation system into the attic. Arriving firefighters managed to put out the fire quite quickly.

As a result of the fire, the roof and part of the premises burned down. The rest were severely damaged by water during extinguishing. Fortunately, there were no paintings in the building, but now the museum is in need of major renovation.

Burnt car tires and pieces of wood were found at the site of the fire. Even after several hours, there was a strong smell of gasoline, which suggests deliberate arson.

Only a year later the paintings were found and returned to the now new owner - the artist’s sister Valentina Vasilyeva. Paintings by the artist Konstantin Vasilyev, which, according to the decision of the Butyrsky court, should be transferred to sister Valentina Vasilyeva, were found in cultural center FSB!

As Irina Lakhouzova, a representative of the Moscow department of the bailiff service, stated: “The paintings were found in the cultural center of the FSB, an FSB officer who was involved in transporting the paintings was involved in this situation. They subsequently disappeared, thanks to the bailiff service, they received information that the paintings were located at the FSB cultural center, they informed the investigation, the investigation has already directly seized it."

In October 2010, an exhibition of missing paintings was held in Moscow.

However, Vasilyeva did not have to dispose of the collection - the same company of swindlers that started this whole story presented her with a huge bill for costs and payment of court decisions in her favor. Therefore, she had to give the paintings to them. In a conversation with the director of the museum A.I. These people told Doronin that the contract for the disposal of the collection was drawn up in such a way that Valentin Vasilyev would never receive the paintings.

After the arson of the museum building, the K. Vasiliev Painting Lovers Club was drawn into numerous litigations with the mentioned legal form. And yet, having won more than 30 wrongful claims, the Club reopened the museum to visitors on March 31, 2012.

The paintings of Konstantin Vasiliev can certainly be considered national treasure. And certainly - of general cultural value. And for all fans of the artist’s work, by and large, it doesn’t matter who exactly will keep the paintings, the main thing is that they are properly taken care of and they are available to the general public. And will it be state or private museum- doesn't matter. This is of fundamental importance only for those who see in Vasiliev’s paintings primarily 90 million rubles, and not works of art.

Today I want to talk about a wonderful, talented, original artist
Konstantin Alekseevich Vasiliev.
His paintings are amazing - they can captivate anyone. His work cannot be confused with any other - the very atmosphere of his magnificent creations is too specific, amazing and recognizable.

Konstantin Vasiliev lived completely short life- 34 years. Born in 1942 in Maykop, he died tragically in a train accident on October 29, 1976 (although there are different versions of his death).

He was buried in the village of Vasilyevo (Tataria), in a birch grove, in the very forest where he loved to be.

Despite the early death, creative heritage Vasiliev is multifaceted and diverse and has more than 400 works of painting and graphics: portraits, landscapes, paintings on fairy tales, on topics of ancient and modern Russian history. Alas, the artist himself is not very well known - his paintings are not sold at auctions for millions of dollars, and in general his work is not very actively advertised. It’s a pity, in my opinion, he deserves it much more than other popular “alternative” artists.
Above the Volga

Sviyazhsk

:
K. A. Vasiliev, by the way, is a descendant of the brilliant I. I. Shishkin (after maternal line). Perhaps heredity played some role in Konstantin’s work, or maybe the upbringing and sensitive approach of his parents. But he began drawing as a child, first copying paintings by other artists. And when he started drawing own paintings, they fascinated everyone who saw them. Unrecognized during his lifetime, Vasiliev wrote as if possessed, as if he felt that he would not be on this earth for long. And only many years later will people notice that Vasiliev’s paintings give rise to the so-called “Italian syndrome” and visitors to exhibitions and the museum will feel the crazy energy that the master put into his canvases. The death of Konstantin Vasiliev at the age of 34 seems to confirm the ominous theory about the connection between genius and inevitable early death.
Man with an eagle owl (conventional title)

The painting is full of symbolism that you don't need to be an expert to understand.
Both the old man and the eagle owl are symbols of wisdom. IN right hand the elder's candle is a symbol of truth. And near his feet lies a flaming parchment. There are only two words written on it and the date - Konstantin Velikoross 1976. This is exactly what Vasiliev often called himself - Konstantin Velikoross, considering it his creative pseudonym. Was it by chance that the artist added a burning parchment to the picture of the old man, which indicated his name and the year in which he died? He didn’t have time to give the picture a title - he died. It's no secret that many great artists(including, in a broad sense, poets and writers) seemed to foresee their future and often predicted death: Pushkin (in “Eugene Onegin”), Lermontov in “Hero of Our Time” and poems), by the poet N. Rubtsov there are the lines “I will die in the Epiphany frosts, I will die when the birches crackle... (died on January 19, 1971) and many such examples can be given.

I remember Vasiliev’s paintings from childhood, from reproductions in the magazines “Rabotnitsa” and “Peasant Woman” - these were “Girl with a Candle”, “An Unexpected Meeting” or “At Someone Else’s Window” (they are similar) and “The Reaper”. Many of Vasiliev’s paintings show the same beauty woman's face. The magazine wrote that this was the image of the artist’s mother.
Reaper

At someone else's window

Then information appeared that funds were being collected for the construction of the K. Vasiliev Museum. We also transferred some amount, and we even received a response with gratitude. Of course, a master of such caliber and talent as Konstantin Vasiliev simply could not help but be awarded his own museum. Memorial Museum he is located in the village of Vasilyevo; in Kazan you can see a gallery named after him. Exhibitions of his paintings were held in Bulgaria, Spain and Yugoslavia.
In 1998, the Vasiliev Museum opened in Moscow, in Lianozovsky Park (Altufyevo metro station) and it was there that admirers of the great master’s work could enjoy his paintings. The Club for Lovers of Konstantin Vasiliev’s Work was also opened here. In 2008, while in Moscow on a business trip, I went to the Vasiliev Museum. He settled in beautiful place- park, in an old two-story house. From the artist’s paintings “live” you really get an extraordinary impression, one might say an emotional shock.

Valkyrie over a slain warrior

Himself a child of wartime, the artist dedicated many paintings to the Great Patriotic War.
Marshal Zhukov.

Invasion.

Farewell of a Slav.


And the history of Rus' occupies a central place
Yaroslavna's lament

Eupraxia (based on tragic story Princess Eupraxia, who during the Mongol invasion chose death over captivity and threw herself from a high wall with her son)

Duel between Peresvet and Chelubey.

Vedic Rus'

Alas, the museum has been under threat of closure for several years now. The fact is, the park, which occupies a considerable area - 2.5 hectares - is a tasty morsel for the nouveau riche of Moscow (what do they need art, Russian history and other sentiments when tens of millions of profits are at stake?) Therefore, everything was used - courts, arson and even an attempt capture.
Vasiliev Museum before

And after the fire

“This museum was created with great love by fans of Vasiliev’s work. This is a special caste of people. And the artist himself is an iconic figure. Because he knew our Reality, not History. History is just written by chroniclers, by people. But not everyone knows what really happened. Konstantin Vasiliev knew. But now is the time for trade. Konstantin Vasiliev and traders are as incompatible as a philharmonic society and a meat processing plant. And, of course, they wanted to grab this tidbit. There's land there night club can be built. It disgusts me to even talk about it... Those who love the work of Konstantin Vasiliev think in the old way. They cannot and do not know how to defend themselves, and, of course, all this will be taken away from them...” Mikhail Zadornov told a KP correspondent about this.
So far, the museum administration, with the support of volunteers, is struggling, but repelling all attacks, like the heroes of Vasiliev’s paintings. But they need help.
Two years have already passed since the museum was set on fire and it has still not been fully restored, which is why they write that the land could be taken away. A speedy restoration is required, which means help. Only the concern of people can prevent further injustice and evil. Friends, help the Konstantin Vasiliev Museum so that the memory of the artist and his brilliant paintings didn't disappear. At least quote this message so that more people learned about the artist, his paintings and the problems of the museum. I live too far from Moscow and perhaps I don’t know something. Muscovites, please answer what last news about the museum, how are things going there?
More detailed information on the official website of the museum: http://vasilyev-museum.ru

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Konstantin Alekseevich Vasiliev(September 3, 1942, Maykop - October 29, 1976, Vasilyevo, Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, RSFSR) - Soviet artist, widely known for his works on epic and mythological themes.
Vasiliev’s creative heritage is multifaceted and diverse and includes more than 400 works of painting and graphics: portraits, landscapes, surreal compositions, paintings on fairy tales, on themes of ancient and modern Russian history. The deep symbolism of painting, combined with the original color scheme of the canvases - the widespread use of silver-gray and red and their shades - make Vasiliev’s paintings recognizable and original.

Born in Maykop (Adygei Autonomous Okrug) during the German occupation of the city. Since 1949 he lived in the village of Vasilyevo near Kazan. Studied at the Kazan Art School (1957-1961). He worked as a drawing and drawing teacher in a high school and as a graphic designer. Vasiliev’s creative heritage is extensive: paintings, graphics, sketches, illustrations, sketches for painting a church in Omsk. Works from the early 1960s. marked by the influence of surrealism and abstract expressionism (“String”, 1963; “Abstract Compositions”, 1963). In the late 1960s gt. abandoned formalistic searches and worked in a realistic manner.
Vasiliev turned to folk art: Russian songs, epics, fairy tales, Scandinavian and Irish sagas, and “Eddic poetry.” He created works on mythological subjects, heroic themes of the Slavic and Scandinavian epics, about the Great Patriotic War (“Marshal Zhukov”, “Invasion”, “Forty-First Parade”, “Longing for the Motherland”, 1972-1975).
He also worked in the genre of landscape and portrait (“Swans”, 1967; “Northern Eagle”, 1969; “At the Well”, 1973; “Waiting”, 1976; “Man with an Eagle Owl”, 1976). Author of a graphic series of portraits of composers and musicians: “Shostakovich” (1961), “Beethoven” (1962), “Scriabin” (1962), “Rimsky-Korsakov” (1962) and others; graphic cycle to R. Wagner’s opera “The Ring of the Nibelungs” (1970s).
Participant in the republican exhibition “Satirist Artists of Kazan” (Moscow, 1963), exhibitions in Zelenodolsk and Kazan (1968-76). In the 1980-90s. a number of personal exhibitions of Vasiliev took place in many cities

Konstantin Alekseevich Vasiliev (1942-1976) is a Russian artist whose creative heritage includes more than 400 works of painting and graphics: portraits, landscapes, surreal compositions, paintings of epic, mythological and battle genres.

Among famous works- cycles “Epic Rus'” and “Ring of the Nibelung”, a series of paintings about the Great Patriotic War, graphic portraits, and last work artist - “Man with an eagle owl”.

From 1949 to 1976 lived in the house where the museum was opened.

In 1976 he died tragically and was buried in the village. Vasilyevo.

In 1984, the Vasiliev family moved to Kolomna near Moscow, where they transported all the artist’s paintings that belonged to them.
The museum occupies part of a residential building, which includes a memorial apartment with an area of ​​53.3 m2.

The exhibition is based on a memorial collection donated by the artist’s sister V.A. Vasilyeva and his friends.

From the book "Rus' Magic Palette" by Anatoly Doronin



To understand the inner world of a person, one must certainly touch his roots. Kostya's father was born in 1897 into the family of a St. Petersburg worker. By the will of fate, he became a participant in three wars and spent his entire life working in management positions in industry. Kostya’s mother was almost twenty years younger than her father and belonged to the family of the great Russian painter I.I. Shishkin.

Just before the war, the young couple lived in Maykop. They were eagerly awaiting their first child. But a month before his birth, Alexey Alekseevich joined the partisan detachment: the Germans were approaching Maykop. Klavdia Parmenovna was unable to evacuate. On August 8, 1942, the city was occupied, and on September 3, Konstantin Vasiliev entered the world. Needless to say, what hardships and hardships befell the young mother and baby. Klavdiya Parmenovna and her son were taken to the Gestapo, then released, trying to uncover possible connections with the partisans. The Vasilievs’ lives literally hung by a thread, and only the rapid advance of Soviet troops saved them. Maykop was liberated on February 3, 1943.

After the war, the family moved to Kazan, and in 1949 - for permanent residence in the village of Vasilyevo. And this was no accident. A passionate hunter and fisherman, Alexey Alekseevich, often traveling outside the city, somehow ended up in this village, fell in love with it and decided to move here forever. Later Kostya will reflect the unearthly beauty of these places in his numerous landscapes.

If you take a map of Tataria, you can easily find the village of Vasilyevo on the left bank of the Volga, about thirty kilometers from Kazan, opposite the mouth of the Sviyaga. Now here is the Kuibyshev Reservoir, and when the family moved to Vasilyevo, here was the untouched Volga, or the Itil River, as it is called in the eastern chronicles, and even earlier, among ancient geographers, it was called by the name of Ra.

Young Kostya was struck by the beauty of these places. It was special here, created by the great river. The right bank rises in a blue haze, almost steep, overgrown with forest; you can see a distant white monastery on the slope, to the right - the fabulous Sviyazhsk, all located on Table Mountain with its temples and churches, shops and houses, rising above the wide meadows in the floodplain of Sviyaga and the Volga. And very far away, already beyond Sviyaga, on its high bank, the bell tower and church of the village of Tikhy Ples are barely visible. Closer to the village there is a river, a wide water stream. And the water is deep, slow and cool, and the pools are bottomless, shady and cold.

In the spring, in April-May, the flood flooded this entire expanse from ridge to ridge, and then to the south of the village water with bushy islands was visible for many kilometers, and distant Sviyazhsk itself turned into an island. By June, the water receded, revealing the entire expanse of flooded meadows, generously watered and fertilized with silt, leaving behind cheerful streams and blue overgrown lakes, densely populated with burbot, tench, loaches, bee-eaters and frogs. The approaching summer heat with irrepressible force drove thick, juicy, sweet grasses out of the ground, and along the banks of ditches, streams and lakes it drove up and out the bushes of willow grass, currants, and rose hips.

The meadows on the left bank of the ridge gave way to light linden and oak forests, which to this day, interspersed with fields, stretch to the north for many kilometers and gradually turn into a coniferous forest-taiga.

Kostya differed from his peers in that he was not interested in toys, did not run around much with other children, but always tinkered with paints, pencils and paper. His father often took him fishing and hunting, and Kostya drew the river, boats, his father, the forest apiary, game, Orlik’s dog, and in general everything that pleased the eye and captured his imagination. Some of these drawings have survived.

Parents helped the development of his abilities as best they could: tactfully and unobtrusively, while protecting taste, they selected books and reproductions, introduced Kostya to music, and took him to museums in Kazan, Moscow, Leningrad, when the opportunity and opportunity presented themselves.

Kostya’s first favorite book is “The Tale of Three Bogatyrs.” At the same time, the boy became acquainted with the painting “Bogatyrs” by V.M. Vasnetsov, and a year later he copied it with colored pencils. On my father's birthday I gave him a painting as a gift. The similarity between the heroes was striking. Inspired by his parents' praise, the boy copied "The Knight at the Crossroads", also with colored pencils. Then I made a pencil drawing from Antokolsky’s sculpture “Ivan the Terrible”. His first landscape sketches have been preserved: a stump strewn with yellow autumn leaves, a hut in the forest.

The parents saw that the boy was gifted and could not live without drawing, and therefore more than once thought about the teachers’ advice - to send their son to an art school. But where, to which class, after which class? There was no such school either in the village or in Kazan. Chance helped.

In 1954, the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper published an advertisement that the Moscow Secondary Art School at the V. I. Surikov Institute accepted children gifted in the field of drawing. His parents immediately decided that this was the kind of school Kostya needed - he showed his ability to draw very early. The school accepted five to six nonresident children per year. Kostya was one of them, passing all exams with excellent marks.

The Moscow secondary art school was located in the quiet Lavrushinsky lane of old Zamoskvorechye, opposite Tretyakov Gallery. There were only three similar schools in the country: in addition to Moscow, there were also in Leningrad and Kyiv. But the MSHS was revered beyond competition, if only because it existed at the Surikov Institute, and had the Tretyakov Gallery as a training base.

Of course, Kostya did not wait for the day when the whole class, led by the teacher, went to the Tretyakov Gallery. He went to the gallery alone as soon as he was enrolled in school. The personal interest inherent in life, on the one hand, and the living, active force of the paintings, on the other, collided in his excited consciousness. Which picture should I go to? No, not to this one, where the night sky and the dark shadow of the house, and not to the one where the sandy seashore and scow in the bay are, and not to the one where the female figures are depicted...

Kostya went further and heard a call within himself when he saw three bright, familiar figures on Vasnetsov’s large, half-wall-length canvas “Bogatyrs”. The boy was delighted to meet the source of his recent inspiration: after all, he studied the reproduction of this painting centimeter by centimeter, looked at it countless times, and then carefully redrew it. So this is what it is - the original!

The boy stared at the determined faces of the heroes, the shiny, authentic weapons, the metallic chain mail, the shaggy horse manes. Where did the great Vasnetsov get all this from? From books, of course! And all this steppe distance, this air before the fight - also from books? What about the wind? After all, you can feel the wind in the picture! Kostya became agitated, now revealing the feeling of wind in front of the original. Indeed, the horses’ manes, and even the blades of grass, are moving in the wind.

Having recovered from the first overwhelming impressions of the giant city, the boy did not get lost in the unfamiliar space. The Tretyakov Gallery and the Pushkin Museum, the Bolshoi Theater and the Conservatory - these became his main gates to the world of classical art. With childish seriousness, he reads “Treatise on Painting” by Leonardo da Vinci, and then studies the paintings of this great master and “Napoleon” by the Soviet historian Evgeniy Tarle, with all the fervor of his young soul he immerses himself in the music of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Mozart and Bach. And the powerful, almost materialized spirituality of these giants is fixed in his consciousness with crystals of precious rock.

Quiet, calm Kostya Vasiliev always behaved independently. The level of his work, declared from the first days of his studies, gave him the right to do this. Not only the boys, but even the teachers were amazed by Kostina’s watercolors. As a rule, these were landscapes, with their own clearly distinctive themes. The young artist did not take something large, catchy, bright, but always found some touch in nature that you could pass by and not notice: a twig, a flower, a blade of grass. Moreover, Kostya performed these sketches using minimal pictorial means, sparingly selecting colors and playing with subtle color relationships. This reveals the boy’s character and his approach to life.

Miraculously, one of his amazing productions was preserved - a still life with a plaster head. Having almost completed the work, Kostya accidentally spilled glue on it; He immediately removed the cardboard from the easel and threw it into the trash bin. So this watercolor, like many others, would have disappeared forever if not for Kolya Charugin, also a boarding school boy who studied a class later and always watched Vasiliev’s work with delight. He saved and kept this still life among his most valuable works for thirty years.

All the components of this still life were tastefully selected by someone from the school's collection of objects: as a background - a medieval plush caftan, on the table - a plaster head of a boy, an old book in a worn leather binding and with some kind of rag bookmark, and next to it - not yet wilted rose flower.

Kostya did not have to study for long - only two years. His father died and he had to return home. He continued his studies at the Kazan Art School, entering the second year immediately. Kostya’s drawings did not resemble the student’s work. He made any sketch with a smooth and almost continuous movement of his hand. Vasiliev made many lively and expressive drawings. It's a pity that most of them have been lost. Of the surviving ones, the most interesting is his self-portrait, painted at the age of fifteen. A smooth thin line draws the contour of the head. With one movement of a pencil, the shape of the nose, the curve of the eyebrows are outlined, the mouth is slightly outlined, the chiseled curve of the auricle, and the curls at the forehead. At the same time, the oval of the face, the shape of the eyes and something else subtle are reminiscent of Sandro Botticelli’s “Madonna of the Pomegranate.”

A typical surviving small still life from that period is “Kulik”, painted in oil. It is a clear imitation of the Dutch masters - the same strict gloomy tonality, filigree painted texture of objects. At the edge of the table, on a rough canvas tablecloth, lies the hunter’s catch, and next to it is a glass of water and an apricot kernel. Transparent well water, a still-drying bone, and a bird left for a while - everything is so natural that the viewer can easily mentally expand the scope of the picture and complete in his imagination some everyday situation accompanying the artist’s production.

By this period of his life, Vasiliev could write in any manner, for anyone. He was a master of the craft. But he had to find his own way and, like any artist, he wanted to say his own word. He grew up and looked for himself.

In the spring of 1961, Konstantin graduated from the Kazan Art School. His diploma work included sketches of the scenery for Rimsky-Korsakov's opera "The Snow Maiden". The defense was brilliant. The work was rated “excellent”, but unfortunately has not been preserved.

In a painful search for himself, Vasiliev “got sick” with abstractionism and surrealism. It was interesting to try styles and trends, led by such fashionable names as Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore, Salvador Dali. Vasiliev quite quickly grasped the creative credo of each of them and created new interesting developments in their vein. Plunging with his characteristic seriousness into the development of new directions, Vasiliev creates a whole series of interesting surreal works, such as “String”, “Ascension”, “Apostle”. However, Vasiliev himself was quickly disappointed by the formal search, which was based on naturalism.

The only thing that is interesting about surrealism, he shared with friends, is its purely external showiness, the ability to openly express in a light form momentary aspirations and thoughts, but not deep-seated feelings.

Drawing an analogy with music, he compared this direction with a jazz arrangement of a symphonic piece. In any case, Vasiliev’s delicate, subtle soul did not want to put up with a certain frivolity of the forms of surrealism: the permissiveness of the expression of feelings and thoughts, their imbalance and nakedness. The artist felt its internal inconsistency, the destruction of something important that is in realistic art, the meaning, the purpose that it carries.

The fascination with expressionism, which related to non-objective painting and claimed greater depth, lasted somewhat longer. Here, the pillars of abstractionism declared, for example, that the master, without the help of objects, depicts not the melancholy on a person’s face, but the melancholy itself. That is, for the artist there is an illusion of much deeper self-expression. This period includes such works as: “Quartet”, “The Queen’s Sadness”, “Vision”, “Icon of Memory”, “Music of Eyelashes”.

Having mastered the depiction of external forms to perfection, having learned to give them a special vitality, Konstantin was tormented by the thought that behind these forms nothing, in essence, was hidden, that, remaining on this path, he would lose the main thing - creative spiritual power and would not be able to express -the real relationship to the world.

Trying to comprehend the essence of phenomena and suffer through a general structure of thoughts for future works, Konstantin took up landscape sketches. What a variety of landscapes he created during his short creative life! Undoubtedly, Vasiliev created landscapes that are unique in their beauty, but some new strong thought was tormented and beating in his mind: “The inner strength of all living things, the strength of the spirit - this is what an artist should express!” Yes, beauty, greatness of spirit - that’s what will be the main thing for Konstantin from now on! And “Northern Eagle”, “Man with an Eagle Owl”, “Waiting”, “At Someone else’s Window”, “Northern Legend” and many other works were born, which became the embodiment of a special “Vasilievsky” style that cannot be confused with anything.


Northern eagle


Konstantin belonged to the rarest category of people who are invariably accompanied by inspiration, but they do not feel it, because for them it is a familiar state. It’s as if they live from birth to death in one breath, in increased tone. Konstantin loves nature all the time, loves people all the time, loves life all the time. Why does he watch, why does he catch his eye, the movement of a cloud, a leaf. He is constantly attentive to everything. This attention, this love, this desire for everything good was Vasiliev’s inspiration. And this was his whole life.


Someone else's window


But it is unfair, of course, to claim that the life of Konstantin Vasiliev was devoid of inescapable human joys. One day (Konstantin was seventeen years old at the time), his sister Valentina, returning from school, said that a new girl had come to them in the eighth grade - a beautiful girl with green, slanting eyes and long, shoulder-length hair. She came to live in the resort village because of her sick brother. Konstantin offered to bring her for posing.

When fourteen-year-old Lyudmila Chugunova entered the house, Kostya suddenly became confused, began to fuss, and began to move the easel from place to place. The first session lasted a long time. In the evening Kostya went to accompany Lyuda home. A gang of guys who came their way brutally beat him: immediately and unconditionally, Lyuda was recognized as the most beautiful girl in the village. But could beatings cool the artist’s ardent heart? He fell in love with the girl. I painted her portraits every day. Lyudmila recounted her romantic dreams to him, and he made color illustrations for them. They both didn’t like the color yellow (maybe just a youthful dislike for the symbol of betrayal?), and one day, after drawing blue sunflowers, Kostya asked: “Do you understand what I wrote? If not, it’s better to be silent, don’t say anything...”

Konstantin introduced Luda to music and literature. They seemed to understand each other from half a word, from half a glance. One day Lyudmila came to see Konstantin with a friend. At that time, he and his friend Tolya Kuznetsov were sitting in the twilight, enthusiastically listening to classical music and did not react to those who entered. For Luda’s friend, such inattention seemed insulting, and she dragged Luda away by the hand.

After this, the girl was afraid of meetings for a long time, feeling that she had offended Kostya. Her whole being was drawn to him, and when she became completely unbearable, she would go up to his house and sit on the porch for hours. But friendly relations were broken.

Several years have passed. Once on the train Konstantin was returning from Kazan with Anatoly. Having met Lyudmila in the carriage, he approached her and invited her: “I have an exhibition opening in Zelenodolsk.” Come. There is also your portrait.

A ringing, joyful hope awoke in her soul. Of course she will come! But at home, my mother categorically forbade it: “You won’t go! Why run around somewhere, you already have a lot of his drawings and portraits!”

The exhibition closed, and suddenly Konstantin himself came to her house. Having collected all his drawings, he tore them up in front of Lyudmila and silently left. Forever…

Several works of a semi-abstract style - a memory of the youthful search for pictorial forms and means, dedicated to Lyudmila Chugunova, are still preserved in the collections of Blinov and Pronin.

At one time, Konstantin had warm relations with Lena Aseeva, a graduate of the Kazan Conservatory. Lena's oil portrait is successfully demonstrated at all the artist's posthumous exhibitions. Elena successfully graduated from an educational institution in piano and, naturally, had an excellent understanding of music. This circumstance especially attracted Konstantin to the girl. One day he made up his mind and proposed to her. The girl replied that she had to think...

Well, who of us, mere mortals, can imagine what passions boil and disappear without a trace in the soul of a great artist, what sometimes insignificant circumstances can radically change the intensity of his emotions? Of course, he did not know what answer Lena came to him with the next day, and, apparently, he was no longer interested in this, since he did not immediately receive the desired answer.

Many will say that this is not serious and that important issues are not resolved this way. And they will, of course, be right. But let's remember that artists, as a rule, are easily vulnerable and proud people. Unfortunately, the failure that befell Konstantin in this matchmaking played another fatal role in his fate.

Already a mature man, at the age of about thirty, he fell in love with Lena Kovalenko, who also received a musical education. An intelligent, subtle, charming girl, Lena disturbed Konstantin’s heart. Once again, as in his youth, a strong, real feeling awoke in him, but the fear of being refused, of encountering misunderstanding did not allow him to achieve his happiness... But in the fact that painting remained his only chosen one until the last days of his life, one can discern the special purpose of the artist.

There are, undoubtedly, objective reasons for this. One of them is the selfless maternal love of Claudia Parmenovna, who was afraid to let her son out of his native nest. Sometimes she could look at the bride too meticulously, with a critical eye, and then express her opinion to her son, to which Konstantin reacted very sensitively.


Man with an owl


Extraordinary talent, a rich spiritual world and the education he received allowed Konstantin Vasiliev to leave his incomparable mark on Russian painting. His paintings are easily recognizable. He may not be recognized at all, some of his works are controversial, but once having seen Vasiliev’s works, one can no longer remain indifferent to them. I would like to quote an excerpt from Vladimir Soloukhin’s story “The Continuation of Time”: -... “Konstantin Vasiliev?!” the artists protested. “But this is unprofessional. Painting has its own laws, its own rules. And this is illiterate from the point of view of painting. He is an amateur ..., an amateur, and all his paintings are amateurish daubs. And not a single spot of painting corresponds to another spot of painting! - But excuse me, if this painting is not even art at all, then how and why does it affect people? .. - Maybe there is poetry, its own thoughts, symbols, images, its own view of the world - we don’t argue, but there is no professional painting - Yes, thoughts and symbols cannot influence people on their own in their naked form. there would only be slogans, abstract signs. And poetry cannot exist in an unembodied form. And on the contrary, if the picture is super-literate and professional, if in it every pictorial spot, as you say, is correlated with another pictorial spot, but there is no poetry in it. , no thought, no symbol, no view of the world, if the picture does not touch either the mind or the heart, is boring, dull or simply dead, spiritually dead, then why do I need this competent relationship of parts. The main thing here, apparently, is the spirituality of Konstantin Vasiliev. It was the spirituality that people felt..."

Kostya died under very strange and mysterious circumstances. The official version is that he and his friend were hit at a railway crossing by a passing train. This happened on October 29, 1976. Kostya's relatives and friends do not agree with this - there are too many incomprehensible coincidences associated with his death. This misfortune shocked many. They buried Konstantin in a birch grove, in the very forest where he loved to be.

Fate, which is so often evil towards great people from the outside, always treats with care what is internal and deep in them. The thought that is to live does not die with its carriers, even when death overtakes them unexpectedly and accidentally. And the artist will live as long as his paintings are alive.



Fires are burning



Valkyrie over a slain warrior



Wotan



Fire Spell