Vasily Kreitan

The Sower (1862)
Bust of Nikolai Gogol in Alexander Garden (1896). Photograph by Andrew Butko

Vasily Petrovich Kreitan, also known as Wilhelm Ferdinand Kreitan (Russian: Василий Петрович Крейтан; 1832, Hamina — 10 June 1896, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian sculptor.

Biography

He was born in what is now Finland to a sculptor of German origin named Peter Kreitan, who participated in the restoration of the Winter Palace after the fire of 1837, and began his education at Saint Peter's School.[1]

In 1858, he enrolled at the Imperial Academy of Arts, where he studied sculpture with Pyotr Clodt and Nikolai Pimenov. In 1862, he won a gold medal for his sculpture The Sower, now on display at the Russian Museum.[1] The following year, he was admitted to a competition being held in honor of Catherine the Great's Centennial. Shortly after, however, a student protest now known as the "Revolt of the Fourteen" began, in opposition to the Academy's insistence on teaching what they felt was the outmoded Classical style. Kreitan was not one of the original thirteen protestors, but joined in solidarity when he saw how poorly they were being treated. All fourteen resigned and accepted the title of "Artist Second Class". Afterwards, he was one of the founding members of the Artel of Artists, an artistic commune.

In 1869, he participated in an exhibition at the Academy and was awarded the title of "Artist First Class". He became a drawing teacher at the Page Corps, taught sculpture at the "Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts" from 1870 to 1891, and gave private lessons.[1]

In 1880, the city of Saint Petersburg decided to establish a sculpture park, with busts of prominent figures from the sciences and arts, in the Alexander Garden, with a selection committee headed by Nicholas Benois. Originally, sixteen busts were planned, but there were concerns that it might look like a cemetery, so only four were finally proposed. In 1884, Kreitan won the commission for a bust of Vasily Zhukovsky, which was dedicated in 1887.[2] Four years later, he was chosen to do the bust of Mikhail Lermontov and, the following year, the bust of Nikolai Gogol. Both were completed just before his death in 1896.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, edited by I. Y. Andreyevsky and K. Arsenyev, Saint Petersburg (1895) Vol.XIV-A "Кояловичъ — Кулонъ"
  2. Saint Petersburg.com: Monuments in the Alexander Garden.

Further reading

Media related to Vasily Kreitan at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.