PHILIP MALYAVIN
PHILIP MALYAVIN 1869 – 1940
Malyavin was born into a peasant family in the rural village of Kazanka in the mid-section of Russia. At the age of sixteen, he convinced his parents to allow him to go to Mount Athos, Greece to study icon painting, with his entire journey financed by the villagers where his family lived. Malyavin entered the monastery as a novice where he gained experience painting icons and murals. In 1891 he met Vladimir Beklemishev, a professor at the Imperial Academy in St. Petersburg, who was visiting Mount Athos. Beklemishev was so impressed with Malyavin’s work that he paid for Malyavin’s enrollment at the Imperial Academy.
In 1892 Malyavin began his studies at the Imperial Academy where he studied under Pavel Chistyakov (1832-1919), Vasily Vereschagin (1842-1904) and Ilya Repin (1844-1930). His fellow students included Igor Grabar, Konstantin Somov, Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva and Boris Kustodiev.
Although Malyavin was trained by the realist painter Ilya Repin, he was strongly influenced by the French Impressionists and the Scandinavian artist Anders Zorn (1860-1920). Malyavin preferred to work on large canvases where he could get very expressive. His graduation painting, Laughter (1899), was actually rejected by the majority of voters at the Academy.
Despite this fact, Malyavin was still awarded a degree and that same painting won the gold medal at the World Exhibition in Paris (1900). That same year, Malyavin married fellow student Natalia Novak-Savich and went on to became a member of the Wanderers and the World of Art.
Malyavin moved to Moscow in 1920, where he did portrait drawings of Lenin, Trotsky and Lunacharsky. In 1922, while traveling to Berlin and Paris to attend his solo exhibitions, he decided to emigrate. He lived in Paris and Nice throughout the 1930s during which time he painted many portraits, including King Gustav V, Prince Eugen and Princess Ingrid of Sweden (1936). In 1940 he was arrested by the Gestapo in Brussels and was accused of espionage. He was released a few months later and, at the age of seventy-one, he was forced to return to Nice on foot. Malyavin died in Nice later that year.
His works are in the Russian Museum, St. Petersburg; Tretyakov gallery, Moscow and many other leading museums and prominent collections of Europe and the United States.
The Young Girl, oil on canvas, 55.5 x 46.3 cm (21.8 x 18.2 in)
Russian Women, 1927, oil on canvas, 100 x 80 cm (39.4 x 31.5 in)
Peasant Woman, oil on canvas, 52 x 37.5 in (132 x 95.3 cm)