Mark Antokolsky
{{Short description|Russian sculptor (1840–1902)}}
{{Infobox artist
| native_name = Марк Антокольский
| image = Mark Antokolsky.jpg
| image_size =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1843|10|21}}
| birth_place = Vilna, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1902|07|09|1843|10|21}}
| death_place = Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, German Empire
| resting_place = {{ill|Jewish Cemetery, Saint Petersburg|lt=Jewish Cemetery|ru|Еврейское кладбище (Санкт-Петербург)}}, Saint Petersburg
| field = Sculpture
| education = Nikolai Pimenov
| alma_mater = {{Imperial Academy of Arts|Alumni|}}
| elected = {{Imperial Academy of Arts|Member|1871}}
{{Imperial Academy of Arts|Professor|1880}}
{{Imperial Academy of Arts|Full|1893}}{{cite book| author = С. Н. Кондаков | url =https://dlib.rsl.ru/viewer/01004180464#?page=30 | title = Юбилейный справочник Императорской Академии художеств. 1764-1914 |date = 1915 |volume= 2 | page = 243 | language= ru | ref = Directory of the Imperial Academy of Arts}}
| awards =
| notable_works =
}}
Mark Matveyevich Antokolsky ({{langx|ru|Марк Матве́евич Антоко́льский}}; 2 November 1840{{spaced ndash}}9 July 1902) was a Russian sculptor of Lithuanian–Jewish descent.Irena Veisaitė: Tolerance and involvement Yves Plasseraud, Brill | Rodopi, 2015, p.196.
Biography
= Early life =
Mordukh Matysovich AntokolskyBoris Schatz: The Father of Israeli Art Yigal Zalmona, The Israel Museum, 2006, signed letter from Paris, p.18. was born in Vilnius (Antokol city district), Lithuania (at the time part of the Russian Empire). He was born into a Jewish family of eight children.{{Cite web |title=The Cahen D'Anvers in France and Italy |url=https://jch.history.ox.ac.uk/article/cahen-danvers-france-and-italy |access-date=2025-05-26 |website=jch.history.ox.ac.uk |language=en}} He studied in the Imperial Academy of Arts (1862–68) at St. Petersburg. He first began with Jewish themes, statues: "Jewish Tailor", "Nathan the Wise", "Inquisition's Attack against Jews", "The Talmudic Debate".
= Later life and career =
From 1868–1870, Mark Antokolsky lived in Berlin. His statue of Ivan the Terrible (1870) was purchased for the Hermitage by Emperor Alexander II of Russia. The latter approved his work and awarded the sculptor the title of Academic. Antokolsky believed that sculpture was a social and humane ideal. In order to improve his failing health, he moved to the Italian resorts in 1871 and settled in Paris six years later.
Every year Antokolsky would come back to his native town of Vilnius during his summer holidays. Namely here he created his first significant work, high relief "A Jewish Tailor", during his summer holidays of 1864.
The work of the young sculptor provoked debate in the Academy in Petersburg. On 28 October 1864, the Council of the Academy decided to award Antokolski with the Small Silver Medal for the "Tailor" by the majority of votes.
While in Vilnius the following year, Antokolski created another high relief - "A Stingy Man," which is sometimes referred to as "A Stingy Jew Counting his Coins". The artist was born into a poor family and saw how his father's financial situation improved. The sculpture might have reflected Antokolski's feelings towards his native town of Vilnius, and firstly to his father. This work as well as the first sculpture was positively evaluated by Vladimir Stasov who saw "the features of the simple truth, the things that, previously, nobody dared to think about in sculpture" in the works of the artist. In 1865, the high relief "Stingy Man" was awarded the Grand Silver Medal of the Academy. In later years the sculptor continued working on Jewish themes, which developed into complex, yet unfinished compositions: "Talmud Dispute" (1866–1868) and "Inquisition Attacks the Jews" (1868–1869). The "Inquisition" was M. Antokolski's last work on the Jewish topic in his student years.
According to the review of the Art Academy, Antokolsky was granted personal name of honorary citizen "for wonderful knowledge of art" on 7 April 1870. This fact was also entered into an archival record. Moreover, an inscription remained that Morduchas was excluded from the revision register of Antakalnis Jewish community as a person awarded the name of an honorary citizen.
In 1871 Antokolsky started his first "Russian" sculpture, "Ivan the Terrible", which made an enormous impression on all valuators and connoisseurs of art. When Emperor Alexander II saw the sculpture he asked to make its bronze copy and allocated the sculptor advance payment of 4,000 roubles. Pavel Tretyakov ordered a marble copy for his gallery. The funds received enabled the artist to resolve his personal problems. In 1871 (in Vilnius) Antokolski met Jelena (Gene), daughter of a rich Vilnius merchant Judelis Giršovičius Apatovas. The two married on 6 September 1872.
File:Mark Antokolski in his studio.jpg
Antokolsky used 4,000 rubles for the "Ivan the Terrible" to buy half of a big house in Vilnius, the other part of which had previously belonged to his wife. In 1876, upon his regular visits to Vilnius, Antokolsky rebuilt the house. After 1876, Antokolsky was a rare visitor to his native town due to illnesses, work, and exhibitions in Paris and Italy, which took almost all of his time. However, the artist did not break his links with Jewish life. Concern over his nation urged Antokolsky to return to his work "Inquisition Attacks the Jews", started 30 years before in Vilnius.
In Rome, Antokolsky completed the statue of Peter the Great for Peterhof Palace in 1872, with its copies for Taganrog and Archangelsk. In 1878 Antokolski exhibited most of his works at the Paris Universal exposition, and received the Grand Prize. In 1880, the personal exhibition of the artist was held in Saint Petersburg, and he was given the rank of professor. Antokolsky left for Paris the same year, and stayed in the French capital until the end of his life, apart from periods on Lake Maggiore, in northern Italy. He realised here the following works: "Spinoza" (1881), "Mephistopheles" (1884), "Yaroslav the Wise" (1889), "Nestor the Chronicler" (1889) and "Yermak Timofeevich" (1891). Several of his small-size sculptures are in the European Art collection of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem.
= Death =
He had also planned a monument to Catherine II in Vilnius. However, with the chronic stomach disease getting more severe, the artist suddenly died on 9 July (27 June according to the old calendar) in Frankfurt (Germany). The last work was completed by I. Ginzburg after the sculptor's death. The monument has not survived.
Antokolski was buried in St. Petersburg. The train with a special carriage went via Vilnius. Antokolski was buried on the 18th (6th according to the old calendar) of July 1902 in the Jewish part of Preobrazhenskoye Cemetery in St. Petersburg. His grave and tombstone can still be found there, not far from the entrance gate, but were not well maintained and cared for at least up to the 1990s.
Gallery
Image:MAntokolski IvanIV.JPG|Ivan the Terrible, 1871
Image:MAntokolski Death of Socrates.JPG|Death of Socrates, 1875
Image:Antakolski Christ.jpg|Christ before the people, 1878
Image:MAntokolsky Angel.JPG|Angel
Image:Antakolski Yermak.jpg|Yermak Timofeyevich
Image:Antakolski Polovtsov.jpg|Alexander Polovtsov, 1880s
Image:MAntokolosky Spinoza.JPG|Spinoza, 1882
Image:Mephisto by Mark Antokolski, marble (GTG, after 1883) by shakko 09.jpg|Mephistopheles, 1884
Image:MAntokolsky Nestor.JPG|Nestor the Chronicler, 1890
Image:Antokolski_Peter_the_Great.jpg|The Peter the Great Monument in the city of Taganrog, 1898
Image:MAntokolski Mermaid.JPG|Mermaid, 1900
References
{{reflist}}
Publications
- {{Cite book |last=Antokolsky |first=Mark M. |url=https://viewer.rsl.ru/ru/rsl01003726323 |title=Марк Матвеевич Антокольский: его жизнь, творения, письма и статьи |date=1905 |publisher=Maurycy Wolff and Partners |editor-last=Stasov |editor-first=Vladimir V. |editor-link=Vladimir Stasov |location=Saint Petersburg, Moscow |language=ru |oclc=5432568}}
Further reading
- {{Cite book |last=Krivdina |first=Olga A. |title=Эпоха Марка Антокольского |last2=Tychinin |first2=Boris B. |date=2020 |publisher=Buksmart |isbn=978-5-907043-97-8 |location=Moscow |language=ru |oclc=1225281074 |name-list-style=and}}
- {{Cite book |last=Litvak |first=Olga |title=The Art of Being Jewish in Modern Times |date=2007 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-4002-3 |editor-last=Kirshenblatt-Gimblett |editor-first=Barbara |series=Jewish Culture and Contexts |location=Philadelphia, PA |pages=228–254 |chapter=Rome and Jerusalem: The Figure of Jesus in the Creation of Mark Antokol’skii |type=collected papers |editor-last2=Karp |editor-first2=Jonathan |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/artofbeingjewish0000unse/page/228/mode/2up |name-list-style=and}}
- {{Cite encyclopedia |title=Antokol’sky, Mark (Matveyevich) |encyclopedia=The Dictionary of Art |publisher=Grove's Dictionaries |location=New York |url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofart02turn/page/173/mode/1up |last=Androsov |first=Sergey O. |date=1996 |editor-last=Turner |editor-first=Jane |volume=2 |page=173 |isbn=1-884446-00-0 |oclc=1033657161 |via=the Internet Archive}}
- {{Cite book |last=Bénézit |first=Emmanuel |author-link=Emmanuel Bénézit |title=Benezit Dictionary of Artists |date=2006 |publisher=Gründ |isbn=2-7000-3070-2 |volume=1 |location=Paris |page=[https://archive.org/details/benezitdictionar01bene/page/561/mode/1up 561] |orig-date=originally published in French in 1911 |via=the Internet Archive}}
- {{Cite book |last=Freitag |first=Wolfgang M. |url=https://archive.org/details/artbooksbasicbib0000frei_u0t3/page/11/mode/1up |title=Art Books: A Basic Bibliography of Monographs on Artists |date=1997 |publisher=Garland |isbn=0-8240-3326-4 |edition=2nd |location=New York, London |at=p. 11, entries nos. 247–248 |lccn=96028425 |orig-date=1985}}
{{Commons category|Mark Antokolski}}
External links
- [https://rah.ru/the_academy_today/the_members_of_the_academie/member.php?ID=52489 Mark Antokolsky] at the Russian Academy of Arts' official website {{in lang|ru}}
- [http://www.imj.org.il/imagine/collections/results.asp?searchType=simple&words=Antokolski%2C+Mark Mark Antokolsky collection] at the Israel Museum. Retrieved September 2016 {{in lang|he}}
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Category:People from Vilensky Uyezd
Category:19th-century Lithuanian Jews
Category:Sculptors from the Russian Empire
Category:19th-century male artists from the Russian Empire
Category:20th-century Russian sculptors
Category:Russian male sculptors
Category:Artists from the Russian Empire
Category:Full Members of the Imperial Academy of Arts
Category:Jewish Russian sculptors
Category:Jewish Lithuanian sculptors