Arseny Semionov


Arseny Nikiforovich Semionov was a Soviet painter and art teacher who lived and worked in Leningrad. He was a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists and is regarded as one of the representatives of the Leningrad school of painting. He is most famous for his landscape and cityscape paintings.

Biography

Arseny Nikiforovich Semionov was born January 23, 1911, in the village of Maksimkovo, Polotsk Uyezd, Vitebsk Governorate, Russian Empire in the family of the master-builder of railway bridges. His father died when Arseny was four years old. Semionov spent his childhood in the Belarusian town of Bykhaw. In 1927 Arseny Semionov moved to Leningrad, where he worked as a general worker, while engaging his free time with painting and drawing at the private art studio of Alfred Eberling, an art teacher and member of AKhRR. In 1930, Arseny Semionov took preparatory courses at the Academy of Fine Arts and in the same year he became a student of the Institute of Proletarian Fine Art. Semionov university years coincided with significant reforms within the institution and the system of art education in general. Between 1934–1937, Semionov worked in the Dmitry Kardovsky studio. Classes taught by Kardovsky and Kardovsky's personality had a great influence on Semionov. In 1937, shortly before graduation from the Institute, Semenov became ill and had to pause his education. After his recovery he obtained a certificate verifying completion of five courses at the department of painting without doing graduate work. He was sent to work in the Penza Art College, where in 1938, he accepted membership in the Penza Organization of Soviet Artists.
With onset of Great Patriotic War, Semionov served in the Red Army's armored forces from 1939 to 1944, dispatched in the Trans-Baikal and Mongolia. He took part in the fights for Khalkhin Gol. He rose from private to commander of a tank battalion. He was wounded five times, marked by military awards, including the Order of the Red Star, Order of the Patriotic War the first and second degrees, and medals. In 1944, Arseny Semionov was discharged with regard to his injury.
Semionov taught at the High School of Arts at the Surikov Arts Institute in Moscow from 1944 to 1947. In 1946 Semionov became a member of the Moscow organization of Soviet artists, which allowed him access to participation in Moscow exhibitions. However, the paintings were created after a long break at work, and for the most part remained unfinished. In September 1947 Arseny Semionov returned to Leningrad and received position as a lecturer at the faculty of general painting of the Leningrad Higher School of Industrial Arts named after Vera Mukhina, where he worked for over forty years. In the same 1947 he was accepted as a member of the Leningrad Union of Artists. Since the late 1940s Arseny Semionov participates in exhibitions of Leningrad artists. By 1951 he graduated from Repin Institute of Arts with painting "Motherhood".
Arseny Nikiforovich Semionov died on 13, September, 1992, in St Petersburg at the eighty-second year of life. His paintings reside in Art museums and private collections in Russia, Japan, France, in the U.S., England, and throughout the world. In 2006 in Saint Petersburg in the Anna Akhmatova Museum hosted an exhibition of works by Arseny Semionov, timed to the publication of the monograph devoted to the life and art of artist.

Works

Throughout his life, Arseny Semionov combined an active teaching career with creative activity. He painted cityscapes and landscapes, still lifes, genre scenes, portraits, and numerous etudes done from the life. He made creative trips to Staraya Ladoga, the Baltic States, Transcarpathia and Crimea. His personal exhibitions took place in Leningrad in 1966, 1977, and in Saint Petersburg in 2006.
By late 1940s and early 1950s, he tended to a definite number of themes and images. Leningrad motifs and ancient Russian cities dominated his works throughout his life, although the methods of their scenic development changed in the direction of the artificial fixation of transience, the desire to convey the freshness and immediacy of color experience in the work of 1950–1960 years, to the search for more subtle and distributions of colors in the works of the late 1960s and 1970s, more decorative, based on the active use of local color and constructive drawing.

Crimea

In the 1950s, which can conditionally be attributed to the early period of the artist, Semionov often spend summer time in the Crimea. The themes of his work becomes Yalta and Gurzuf, picturesque corners of the old town and the rest on the seaside promenade. Semionov likes the southern sun and the sonorous brightness of colors. He eagerly seeks to convey on canvas his immediate impressions of the southern nature and life of the street, filled with the sun, contrasts of light and shadows and sporadic movement. The painting In Yalta is one of the best examples of the work of Semionov of the "Crimean" period. It illustrates the recognizable creative style of the artist of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Much of what was acquired in this early «Crimean» period of his work will be preserved in the individual manner of Semionov as its characteristic and recognizable features. The most interesting examples of the creativity of Semionov of this period can serve the works Crimea Theme, A Little Street in Yalta, A Pier in the Yalta, Embankment in Yalta, Yalta Cargo Port, Yalta Embankment, Yalta. In the Park, and others.

Leningrad Theme

In 1950–1960, the cityscape invariably occupied a prominent place in the work of Semionov. Some of them, such as Spring Day, which depicts the perspective of one of the most beautiful streets of Leningrad, belongs to the best cityscapes created by Arseny Semionov in this genre at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s.
Among the works he created in this genre should be called Spring City Landscape and Spring on the outskirts of Leningrad, Narva Gate in Leningrad, Marti Shipyards in Leningrad, On the Neva River Embankment, Boat Station at the Fontanka River, Nevsky Prospekt, Flower Market, Fontanka River and Factory Motive, St Isaac's Square in Leningrad, Okhtinsky Bridge, The University Embankment, At the Kirov Prospekt, The Neva River Embankment, Spring on the Neva River, Construction Zanevsky Bridge at the Neva River, The Leningrad. View at the University Embankment, The Leningrad Factory Theme, Alexanrovsky Park in Leningrad, Leningrad in Winter, and much others.

Old Russian Towns

A special impact on the work of Semionov had a trips to the ancient Russian cities Pskov, Staritsa, Izborsk, Torzhok, Suzdal, Staraya Ladoga, Kostroma and work there. Having first discovered Pskov and Staraya Ladoga in the late 1950s, Semionov devoted many years to this topic. As an artist, he was attracted by living history, ancient architecture and a special way of life, organically combined with the surrounding nature. According to his works of this cycle, one can trace how his individual style has changed in 1960s in the direction of enhancing the decorativeness of painting and the sophistication of color. An example of these changes is the painting Old Ladoga, in which the artist convincingly demonstrated a new understanding of color.
Among the works painted by him from the life during numerous trips to ancient Russian cities, are Pskov Cathedral, Pskov. Blue Gate, A Little Bridge in Pskov, Landscape with a River, Pskov Ancient Town, Old Ladoga. Winter Landscape, Old Ladoga. The Village Council, Fisherman moorage in New Ladoga, New Ladoga in Holiday, Fisherman's village, Old Ladoga. View at the Volkhov River, Pskov Cremlin,''Old Ladoga Town, Old Ladoga, St Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod the Great, Suzdal. View of the Kremlin, Suzdal. A Monuments of Architecture, Torzhok city, View of Suzdal, View at the Cathedrals in Torzhok, Street in Torzhok'', and others.
In the 1960s Semionov repeatedly traveled to the Baltic and the Carpathians, as well as visiting France and Italy. In his paintings appear more subtle and generalized colors. Disappears excessive fragmentation, it replaces the large wholeness and contemplation. Semionov often uses local color. In his painting is enhanced imagery and decorative. In some works of this period discern the influence of Sergei Osipov, a talented painter, with whom Arseny Semionov linked the long-standing friendship, the creative journey, and common pedagogical work at the Department of Painting of the Vera Mukhina Institute.

Still-Life

In the 1970s Arseny Semionov successfully appealed to a relatively rare for him genre of still life, creating a variety of decorative and fine works of art. Among them are marked at the art shows and in publications Still Life with a Flower, Still Life with antique sculpture, Still Life with Flowers, Still Life with Teapot, Still Life with Jug and Apples, and others.

Self-Portrait

Arseny Semenov rarely painted portraits. They were mostly images of family: his wife and daughter. Stand out self-portraits the artist painted them in the years of 1950–1960s. These works, in particular, Self-Portrait and Self-Portrait of 1964, open new facets of the artist's talents, making for a different look at the rest of his work. In a small laconic work Semionov used amazingly accurate means of expression, which allow him with the utmost frankness and depth to say about himself, about his generation and epoch.
In 1966 in Leningrad has been shown exhibition of works by Arseny Semionov, dedicated to the 55th anniversary of the artist and 20 years of his teaching work at the Department of Painting of the Vera Mukhina Institute. In 1977, in the halls of the Leningrad Union of Artists has been shown a joint exhibition of paintings by Arseny Semionov, Sergei Osipov, and Cyril Gushchin.

Principal exhibitions