Vasily Semyonovich Sadovnikov (Russian: Василий Семёнович Садовников) (28 December [O.S. 16 December] 1800 – 10 March [O.S. 26 February] 1879) was a Russian painter, and a leading Russian master of perspective painting.
Biography
Vasily Semenovich Sadovnikov was born in 1800 in Saint Petersburg into the family of a serf belonging to Princess N. P. Golitsyna. He obtained his freedom in 1838, after her death, when he was already a well-known artist.
Vasily's brother, Pyotr Sadovnikov, was the architect of the Stroganov and Golitsyn families. He started his professional training with Andrey Voronikhin, subsequently became a Member of Saint Petersburg Academy of Arts (1849).[1] Vasily Sadovnikov also learned his craft in Voronikhin's studios, where he came in contact with the painters Maxim Vorobiev and Alexey Venetsianov, who not only helped the gifted youth professionally but also took an active part in his liberation. Sadovnikov mainly painted "views" (vedute), but these views are always inhabited with vivid scenes, which characterize the artist not only as a landscapist but also as a genre master.
His views of St. Petersburg and its suburbs from 1830 to 1850 and interiors of its palaces, commissioned by the royal court and other high patrons, are best known. Sadovnikov's Panorama of Nevsky Prospect (1830–1850), which was 16 meters long, was later etched and widely published.
He died in 1879 in Saint Petersburg and was buried at Mitrofanyevskoe Cemetery (now abolished[2]).
See also
- Vasily Tropinin, another painter who was born a serf.
- Andrey Voronikhin, an architect who was a serf.
References
- ↑ Boglachev, Sergey. "Sadovnikov P.S. (1796–1877), architect". Encyclopaedia of St. Petersburg. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- ↑ Nikitenko, Galina. "Mitrofanyevskoe Freeway". Encyclopaedia of St. Petersburg. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
Sources
- Boglachev, Sergey. "Sadovnikov P.S. (1796–1877), architect". Encyclopaedia of St. Petersburg. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- Leikind, Oleg; Severyukhin, Dmitriy. "Sadovnikov V.S., (1800–1879), Artist". Encyclopaedia of St. Petersburg. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- Senkevitch, Tatiana (2014). "The Phantasmagoria of the City: Gogol's and Sadovnikov's Nevsky Prospect, St Petersburg". In Wrigley, Richard (ed.). The Flâneur Abroad: Historical and International Perspectives. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 166–204. ISBN 978-1-4438-6016-1.