Hello lovely ladies,
I have three postcards for you today. All three are ballerinas and all three cards come from Russia.
The wolverine is the largest land-dwelling species of the family Mustelidae. It is a muscular carnivore and a solitary animal. The wolverine has a reputation for ferocity and strength out of proportion to its size, with the documented ability to kill prey many times larger than itself.
The wolverine is found primarily in remote reaches of the Northern boreal forests and subarctic and alpine tundra of the Northern Hemisphere, with the greatest numbers in Northern Canada, the U.S. state of Alaska, the mainland Nordic countries of Europe, and throughout western Russia and Siberia. Its population has steadily declined since the 19th century owing to trapping, range reduction and habitat fragmentation. The wolverine is now essentially absent from the southern end of its European range.
Zinaida Serebriakova was born on the estate of Neskuchnoye near Kharkov (now Kharkiv, Ukraine) into one of the most refined and artistic families in the Russian Empire.
She belonged to the artistic Benois family. Her grandfather, Nicholas Benois, was a famous architect, chairman of the Society of Architects and member of the Russian Academy of Science. Her uncle, Alexandre Benois, was a famous painter, founder of the Mir iskusstva art group. Her father, Yevgeny Nikolayevich Lanceray, was a well-known sculptor, and her mother, who was Alexandre Benois' sister, had a talent for drawing. One of Zinaida's brothers, Nikolay Lanceray, was a talented architect, and her other brother, Yevgeny Yevgenyevich Lanceray, had an important place in Russian and Soviet art as a master of monumental painting and graphic art. The Russian-English actor and writer Peter Ustinov was also related to her.
In 1905, she married her first cousin, Boris Serebriakov, the son of Evgenyi's sister, and took his surname. Boris went on to become a railroad engineer.
At the outbreak of the October Revolution in 1917, Serebriakova was at her family estate of Neskuchnoye, and suddenly her whole life changed. In 1919, her husband Boris died of typhus. She was left without any income, responsible for her four children and her sick mother. All the reserves of Neskuchnoye had been plundered, so the family suffered from hunger. She had to give up oil painting in favour of the less expensive techniques of charcoal and pencil. This was the time of her most tragic painting, House of Cards, which depicts their four fatherless children.
In the autumn of 1924, Serebriakova went to Paris, having received a commission for a large decorative mural. On finishing this work, she intended to return to the Soviet Union, where her mother and the four children remained. However, she was not able to return, and although she was able to bring her younger children, Alexandre and Catherine, to Paris in 1926 and 1928 respectively, she could not do the same for her two older children, Evgenyi and Tatiana, and did not see them again for many years.
In 1947, Serebriakova at last took French citizenship, and it was not until Khruschev's Thaw that the Soviet Government allowed her to resume contact with her family in the Soviet Union. In 1960, after 36 years of forced separation, her older daughter, Tatiana (Tata), was finally allowed to visit her. At this time, Tatiana was also working as an artist, painting scenery for the Moscow Art Theatre.
Serebriakova's works were finally exhibited in the Soviet Union in 1966, in Moscow, Leningrad, and Kiev, to great acclaim. Her albums sold by the millions, and she was compared to Botticelli and Renoir. Serebriakova rejoiced at success in her homeland. However, although she sent about 200 of her works to be shown in the Soviet Union, the bulk of her work remains in France today.
Serebriakova died after a brain hemorrhage in Paris on 19 September 1967, at the age of 82. She is buried in Paris, at the Russian cemetery at Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois.
7 comments:
Oh I don't even know where to start. I love this post. The art, the info, the things you do all week long. BTW In N. Idaho US we saw Wolverines. Incredible animal. Have a wonderful weekend.
Those ballerina postcards are amazing and that poor woman who lost her husband and everything is heartbreaking. So sad she was separated from her children for so long.
You're going to have more fruit than you will know what to do with soon.
Some of your funnies were hilarious. I think I finally got the first one. have a great Friday and happy weekend, dear. See you on Tuesday. Now I'm off to get something to eat, like I always do when you share your weekly photos.
Oh that last funny definitely made me smile never a truer word spoken. Twelve fruit trees must equal an orchard. Loving the Herman cake photo that always look amazing. Glad you got to an in person church service again it must feel like a degree of normality has returned. Hope hubby is managing on the oral chemo, have an awesome week xxxxxx
Laughed so hard about some of the cartoons! Maybe louder as I should. *LOL* So many beautiful things and information. And yay about the apple tree. I plan on buying one, too, once we moved house and have a bigger garden. Have a great weekend!
Hi Lisca, that first postcard is really beautiful! and then saw the second and third ones and love them too and the stamps always catch my attention obviously. That's interesting about the Wolverine too, don't think I've ever seen one before or indeed the whale. All very interesting info. Nice to see what you've been up to this week and the funnies had me in stitches as usual. Have a great weekend. Hugs, Angela xXx
Wow! So much great information and photos in this post! Learned about the Gulo gulo and narwhal, enjoyed seeing the photos of the ballerinas, and really like your collages. That's such a great way to sum up each day.
Love the postcards and always enjoy your daily collages. You’re going to have a lovely orchard when the trees get growing. Really love the funnies.
Hugs,
Annie x
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