| Chagall
in Mother Russia
If
you didn't know this was the famous Chagall,
and if you didn't know Chagall was going to
become perhaps the greatest Jewish painter of
the twentieth century; what would you think
of the early works of this artist when he lived
in Russia as a student and young man? A collection
of early work (most never seen before outside
of Russia) in "Marc Chagall - Early Works from
Russian Collections" currently at the Jewish
Museum allows us to examine a small portion
of his work and see him in isolation before
he became one of the big international names
of modern art.
Marc
Chagall was born in Vitebsk in 1887, received
a traditional Jewish primary education under
the guidance of his Hasidic parents and then,
as a teenager, went to the first, and for some
time, only art school in the Pale of Settlement
under the tutelage of Yehuda Pen.
Yehuda
Pen's rather academic paintings, some shown
here, bear almost no aesthetic relationship
to the early Chagall. Rather, Pen's most important
influence was to introduce Chagall to Modern
Art and to provide the crucial understanding
that it was in fact possible to be a Jew and
also an artist. Pen, an observant Jew, closed
his school on Shabbos and Yom Tov, thought of
himself as a Jewish artist and selected his
subjects from the local Russian Jewish world
of Vitebsk, a provincial town with a major Jewish
population. Pen's depictions of devout Jews,
and craftsmen were typically sentimental and
detail oriented. But, most importantly, it was
the unusual combination of devotion to art and
Jewish practice that made Yehuda Pen such a
decisive influence on Marc Chagall.
Chagall
was encouraged to further his studies in the
cultural capital of Russia, St. Petersburg in
1908. There he explored modernism and studied
with Leon Bakst at the Zvantseva School, then
the most progressive art school in Russia. We
can see in the his "Butcher" of 1910 that he
was willing to explore his own personal subject
matter with a amazing independence for a twenty-three
year old provincial artist. This painting of
his grandfather is infused with the tension
found between religiosity and slaughter, piety
and blood. At first it seems iconic, the butcher
seen in profile with his hatchet and slaughtering
knife. Then we notice in the swirl of upturned
perspective and strange animals scattered about,
that the butcher is glancing out at us, bringing
us into his workaday world. The color is primarily
earth tones with random hints of other worldly
greens and blues freely applied. Chagall seems
quite earthbound in these early works. Chagall
is not yet Chagall.
In
1910 he followed his teacher, Leon Baksk, to
Paris and there he began to develop what will
become his signature style; otherworldly, colorful
and totally unique. He became famous within
the blossoming European avant-garde. But in
June 1914, missing his fiancée, he returned
to Russia for a brief visit that would last
until 1922.
Chagall's
paintings after he returned to Russia in 1914
have not yet been totally transformed by his
modernist experience.. "My Father" is a wonderfully
insightful portrait of his worn out father,
a laborer in a herring warehouse. Each element
of the painting; the tea glass, the sugar cubes,
his grandmother and the family cat; all vibrate
against modulated yellow and blue interior.
His father's exhausted stare demands our contemplation
of a long hard-lived life. There follows a series
of works that explore various motifs, almost
as if Chagall is testing the waters to find
the subjects that truly suit him. The effects
of World War One are reflected in a stark series
of India ink drawings of the wounded and dying.
Chagall is still rooted in a contemporary reality
as he represents the suffering of plain folk.
The
unique Chagall now slowly emerges as we see
a series of black and white illustrations for
Der Nister's Yiddish Tales (1916) that moves
his images away from representations of reality.
They have become a kind of shorthand fantastic
view of a pared down universe populated with
roosters, goats and floating moons. In a way
Chagall has internalized all of his impressions
and visions of his Russian Jewish life. An old
Jew hovers over Vitebsk in an image that defies
conventions of scale and real world physics.
This enormous silhouetted Jew with a cane and
satchel on his back becomes emblematic of the
Jewish presence in Russia, echoing the Yiddish
expression; "geyen iber di heiser"; literally
"going over houses" to describe begging door
to door. Our people have been reduced to this
and yet to Chagall, it is the world he carries
in his head.
And
his heart he wears on his sleeve. Two enormous
and highly personal paintings, both finished
around 1918, depict Chagall and his bride, Bella,
airborne and in love over their fantastic green
hometown of Vitebsk. The exhibition seethes
with expressions of Chagall's love and affection
for his bride and their newborn daughter, Ida.
The great modernist rebel is clearly a softhearted
family man.
"Jew
in Bright Red" (1915) is his masterpiece from
the period before the Russian Revolution of
1917. This highly complex painting depicts the
Chagall Jewish universe. The Russian Jew, in
his distinctive hat, is seated before his house,
and his house before all the village's houses.
Pesukim from beraishis makes up the golden background
that embraces the entire scene. This universe
is filled with a Torah passion. His beard is
aflame, mirroring the houses. And the complexity
of thought, spirituality, and piety is expressed
between one green hand of inspiration and one
white one of rationality. Is the little bush
about to burst into flame, re-making our Jew
into a Moses? Chagall has found his means of
expression.
The
revolution swept Russia and Chagall along with
it. He is optimistic and in 1918 becomes Commissar
of Art for Vitebsk. Culture was to serve the
revolution. Later in 1920 he is asked to design
the set and costumes for the inaugural production
of one-act plays by Sholem Aleichem in the State
Jewish Chamber Theater in Moscow. We see the
murals he designed and hastily executed for
the State sponsored Yiddish Theater. They are
wonderfully ambitious and wildly uneven. The
strongest paintings are of the Four Arts, expressed
by four central participants at a traditional
Jewish wedding. The Scribe to write the ketubah
is Literature; the Badchen jester is Theater;
the joyous Matchmaker becomes the Dance; and
finally, the Fiddler is Music. In these single
figures Chagall revels in the elements of art,
Jewish life and joy.
The
marriage of Soviet revolution and Yiddish culture
was not to last and, under increasing state
controls, Chagall emigrated from Soviet Russia
in 1922. These works remained there until this
exhibition. They represent the youth left behind
of a major modern artist that are filled with
potential. Some, like "Jew in Bright Red," are
major artistic statements. Many other works
bask in the reflected glory of later accomplishments.
But
all the truly interesting works in this exhibition
share one element. Their Jewishness, expressed
as direct or echoed depictions of Jewish life,
filtered through the creative imagination of
an artistic rebel. The uniquely Jewish sensibilities
linking love, marriage, family and spirituality
are expressed as one cohesive universe. From
this exhibition we can see that Chagall was
true to his roots from the very beginning.
Richard
McBee
June 5, 2001
Marc Chagall - Early Works from Russian Collections
Jewish Museum 1109 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y.
10128; (212) 423 3200
Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday - 11am -
5:45pm;
Tuesday 11am-8pm; (after 5pm, pay what you wish)
$8 adults; $5.50 students and seniors; Tuesdays
after 5pm free.
Until October 14, 2001
Published
in The Jewish Press
|
| |

Butcher (Grandfather) (1910)
by Marc Chagall;
The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow Copyright,
2001 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
/ ADAGP, Paris
My Father (1914)
by Marc Chagall;
The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Copyright,
2001 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
/ ADAGP, Paris

Jew
in Bright Red (1915)
by Marc Chagall; The State Russian Museum, St.
Petersburg Copyright, 2001 Artists Rights Society
(ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris Date)

Music (Fiddler) (1920)
by Marc Chagall;
The State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow Copyright,
2001 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
/ ADAGP, Paris
|