Aleksey Afanas'ev

Aleksey Afanas'ev; detail from "Visit to a Sick Friend" by
Kyriak Kostandi (1884)

Aleksey Fyodorovich Afanas'ev, also Afanasiev or Afanasyev (Russian: Алексей Фёдорович Афанасьев; 30 November 1850, Saint Petersburg - c. 1920, location unknown) was a Russian painter, graphic artist, caricaturist and illustrator who was associated with the Peredvizhniki.

Biography

Presentation of the Icon

His parents were servants at the Imperial Court, and he originally worked as a footman and stoker.[1] In 1872, he began auditing classes at the Imperial Academy of Arts and was accepted as a student a year later. In 1877, he received a silver medal for his drawings from nature. From 1887 to 1905, he was a teacher at the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts.[2]

In 1905, following the death of Konstantin Savitsky, he was named to succeed him as Director of the art college in Penza, near Moscow. He resigned (some sources say he was dismissed) four years later and returned to his position as teacher at the Imperial Society.[2]

From 1889 to 1918, he participated in the exhibitions of the Peredvizhniki.[3] After 1912, he provided drawings for several satirical, humorous and literary periodicals, including Fragments (Осколки). He also did illustrations for The Tale of Tsar Saltan and The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish by Pushkin,[2] as well as works by Aleksey Tolstoy; but his best-known works of this type are, perhaps, those for The Humpbacked Horse by Pyotr Yershov.[1] Many of his illustrations were published as postcards. From 1894 to 1897, along with Viktor Vasnetsov, Mikhail Nesterov and other well-known painters, he participated in decorating the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood, creating drawings for numerous mosaics.

He apparently disappeared during the Russian Civil War.

References

Further reading

  • Alexander Burtsev, "Aleksey Afanas'ev and His Artistic Career", in Мой журнал для немногих (My Journal for the Few), Issue #9, 1914.
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