Ivan Bilibin was born on 16 August [O.S. 4 August] 1876 in Tarkhovka, Saint Petersburg. He was born to Yakov Ivanovich Bilibin, assistant chief physician at the Saint Petersburg Naval Hospital, and Vavara Alexandrova Bilibina (née Bubnova).[2]
In 1890, Bilibin was accepted into the First Saint Petersburg Gymnasium. He graduated from the Gymnasium with a silver medal in 1896. From 1895 to the spring of 1898, he studied at the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. In 1896 Bilibin began studying at the law faculty of the University of Saint Petersburg, and he completed his course there in 1900. Bilibin received a lawyer's diploma in the same year from the Law Faculty of Novorossiysk University.[2]
Bilibin gained some success as early as 1899, when he first released illustrations for Russian fairy tales. The same year, after the formation of the artists' association Mir Iskusstva, in which Bilibin was an active member, his career as an illustrator of books and magazines began with a commission for its magazine Mir Iskusstva. He later also contributed essays on Russian folk art.[5] Artistic designs for other magazines such as Dog Rose (Шиповник) and productions of a Moscow publishing house followed.
After graduating in May 1901, Bilibin went to Munich, where he completed his training with the painter Anton Ažbe.[citation needed]
In the period 1902 to 1904,[citation needed] working under the Russian Museum (Museum of His Imperial Majesty Alexander III) Bilibin traveled to the Vologda, Olonetsk, and Arkhangelsk Governorates, performing ethnographic research and studying examples of Russian wooden architecture.[6] In 1904 he published his findings in the monograph Folk Arts of the Russian North. Old Russian art had a great influence on his work. Another influence on his art was traditional Japanese prints and Renaissance woodcuts.[7][1] On 16 December 1903 Bilibin became one of the founding members of the Union of Russian Artists.[2]
During the Russian Revolution of 1905, Bilibin drew revolutionary cartoons, especially for the magazine Zhupel (Жупелъ), which in 1906 was banned because of his illustration depicting the emperor as a donkey.[2][8] In 1909 Bilibin served as the designer for the first stage production of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's The Golden Cockerel.
In 1910, Bilibin left the Union of Russian Artists, as a result of differences in approach to their creative work.[2]
In 1911, Bilibin was hired by the State Paper Manufacturing Section to illustrate ball programs, exhibition and book posters, postcards for the Red Cross's Society of St. Eugenia, and envelopes and stationery with the Russian Bogatyrs.[9]
In March 1916 Bilibin was elected chairman of the World of Art group.[2]
On 22 September 1917, shortly before the October Revolution, Bilibin left Petrograd for Crimea, where he lived and worked until September 1919. He moved to Rostov-on-Don in October, and Novorossiysk in December 1919.[2]
Egypt
On 13 March 1920, fleeing the Russian Civil War, Bilibin arrived in Alexandria where he spent quarantine, before moving to the Tell El Kebir refugee camp. In May, he settled in Cairo. In Cairo, he painted for the Greek colony, specialising in the Byzantine style art that was in demand by the Greek colony for icons and frescoes. He painted Egyptian landscapes, and studied Egyptian, Coptic and Arab art. He was also enraptured by the architecture of mosques and their "head-spinning ornamentation".[2]
In the Summer on 1924, Bilbin, his wife and step-son travelled to Palestine and Syria, where he painted landscapes.[2]
On his return to Egypt in October 1924, Bilibin settled in Alexandria.[2]
France
In August 1925, Bilibin and his family moved to Paris, where he took to decorating private houses and Orthodox churches.[4] The catalyst to the move was to attend the World Exhibition in Paris.[2]
Return to Russia
On 16 September 1936, Bilibin and his family returned to the Soviet Union, arriving in Leningrad. Three days later, Bilibin was appointed professor of graphic art at the Leningrad Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture at the All-Russian Academy of Arts. He remained in position until his death.[2]
On 28 April 1902, Bilibin married his former student and fellow pupil at the Tenisheva studio, Irish-Russian painter and illustrator of children's stories Maria Chambers. They had two sons; Alexander (9 January 1903 1903–1972; artist) and Ivan (1908–1993; journalist).[2][10][11][12]
At the end of 1912, Bilibin entered a common law marriage with former student and artist Renée O'Connell (although Bilibin was still legally married to his first wife, Maria Chambers).[2]: 189 [13][14][15] Bilibin was 15 years her senior, and together they travelled around the Crimean peninsula to draw.
The relationship struggled due to Bilibin's drinking. The couple entered an agreement, witnessed by their friend musician Stepan Stepanovich Mitusov, that if Bilibin did not drink for a year, then O'Connell would stay with him. Bilibin did not keep his word, and O'Connell left Bilibin in September 1917, with Bilibin travelling to Crimea alone following the events of the Russian Revolution.[2]: 195 [13][16][17][18]
Mitusov wrote a comic poem about the breakdown of the couple's relationship.[a][17][18]
Bilibin wrote to Maria Chambers in 1922, asking for a divorce (in order for Bilibin to marry Shchekatikhina), to which she did not respond.[19] However, they were divorced by 1923.[12]
Afanasyev, Alexander (1996), Russkie narodnye skazki - Russian Fairy Tales (in Russian and English) , selection from "State Department" work (1899-1902) that includes Sister Alionushka..; Tsarevich Ivan, the Firebird, and the Grey Wolf; The Frog Tsarevna; Vasilisa..; Feather of Finist; White Duck; and Maria Morevna. Main illustrations only
Roslavlev, A.S. (1911), Сказки [Fairy Tales] (in Russian)
Поди туда — не знаю куда, принеси то — не знаю что… [Go there - I do not know where, bring that - I do not know what ...] (in Russian), 1919 , unpublished
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrsGolynets, Sergei (1982). Ivan Bilibin. Translated by Kozlov, Glenys Ann. Leningrad: Aurora Art Publishers. pp. 197–208. ISBN0-8109-0735-6.
^Jose Alainz, Komiks: Comic Art in Russia, 2010, p.26
^ abJanina Orlov, 'Ivan Bilibin' in Donald Haase, The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales: A-F, p. 121
^Richard Taruskin, 'From Subject to Style: Stravinsky and the Painters' in Jann Pasler, Confronting Stravinsky: Man, Musician, and Modernist, 1986, p. 26
^Elena Litovchenko, 'Late Nineteenth Century Cover Designs from the Collection of the Research Museum of the Russian Academy of Fine Arts' in Alla Rosenfeld, Defining Russian Graphic Arts: From Diaghilev to Stalin, 1898-1934, pp. 47-48
^Rosalind P. Blakesley, 'The Venerable Artist's Fiery Speeches Ringing in my Soul', in J.B Bullen, Internationalism and the Arts in Britain and Europe at the Fin de Siècle, p.101
^ abLeykind, O L; Makhrov, K V; Severyukhin, D Ya (1999). Художники русского зарубежья: 1917-1939 [Russian artists abroad: 1917-1939] (in Russian). St Petersburg: Notabene. ISBN5-87170-110-8.
^ abMelnikov, V L (5 December 2009). "С.С. Митусов и "Мир искусства"" [S.S. Mitusov and “World of Art”] (in Russian). St. Petersburg State Museum-Institute of the Roerich Family. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
^И. Я. Билибин в Египте 1920—1925 [I. Ya. Bilibin in Egypt 1920-1925] (in Russian). Moscow: Russian House. 2009. ISBN978-5-98854-010-6.
Notes
^Билъ и Бин друзьями были./ Ах, связал их тесно Р. О. К./ С колыбели вместе жили/ И друг друга так любили,/ Что ни Билъ один не мог/ Жить без Бина, ниже Бин/ Быть без Биля день один./ Горький пьяница безбожник,/ Билъ - гуляка, весельчак,/ Бин - поэт, большой художник,/ И в музыке не сапожник./ Не могли они никак/ Рисовать без Биля Бин,/ Бин без Биля пить один./ Так друзьями вместе жили/ Билъ и Бин: связал их Р. О. К./ Рисовали, пели, пили/ И друг друга так любили,/ Что ни Билъ один не мог/ Жить без Бина, ниже Бин/ Быть без Биля день один.
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