Moonlit Night on the Dnieper

{{Short description|1880 painting by Arkhip Kuindzhi}}

{{Infobox artwork

| image = Kuindzhi Moonlit night on the Dnieper 1880 grm x2.jpg

| image_size = 350px

| artist = Arkhip Kuindzhi

| year = 1880

| medium = Oil on canvas

| subject = Dnieper River

| height_metric = 105

| width_metric = 144

| museum = Russian Museum

| city = Saint Petersburg

}}

Moonlit Night on the Dnieper ({{langx|ru|Лунная ночь на Днепре}}) or Moonlit Night on the Dnipro{{Cite book |last=Cybriwsky |first=Roman Adrian |title=Along Ukraine's river: a social and environmental history of the Dnipro |date=2018 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=978-963-386-205-6 |location=Budapest New York |page=134}}{{Cite book |title=Ukraïns'kyj modernizm: 1910—1930 |date=2006 |publisher=National Art Museum of Ukraine |isbn=978-966-8834-07-3 |editor-last=Melʹnyk |editor-first=Anatolij |location=Kyïv |trans-title=Ukrainian Modernism 1910–1930 |editor-last2=}} is an oil on canvas painting by Russian artist Arkhip Kuindzhi, from 1880.

Description

The painting displays the banks of the Dnieper river at night during a full moon. The horizon line is heavily lowered, such that a very large portion of the painting is occupied by the sky. The moonlight is reflected by the river.

History

Kuindzhi began work on the painting in the summer and fall of 1880. After starting the painting process, he opened his studio to the public for two hours each Sunday for those who wished to see him working. Even before the painting's public exhibition, it was purchased from the workshop by Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich. Several of Kuindzhi's correspondents and friends visited the studio while he was working on the painting to see the work. These included Ivan Turgenev, Yakov Polonsky, Ivan Kramskoi, and Dmitri Mendeleev.{{Cite web|date=2014|title="Лунная ночь на Днепре" Архипа Куинджи. Слава и трагедия картины|trans-title="Moonlight Night on the Dnieper" by Arkhip Kuindzhi. Glory and tragedy of the painting|url=http://kuinje.ru/moonnight.php|access-date=17 February 2022|website=kuinje.ru|language=ru}}

When the painting was put on exhibition, it was done so in the hall of the Society for the Encouragement of Artists in Saint Petersburg. Kuindzhi was attentive to his paintings' lighting, and took extra precautions with "Moonlit Night." The painting was placed on a wall, the window curtains were lowered to block outside light, and an artificial light was centered on the painting to accentuate its features.

Unusually, "Moonlit Night" was the only painting in the exhibition, made even more strange by its apparently humble nature. It was rather small, and was just a landscape. Regardless, a crowd formed outside with a long line to see the painting, and visitors had to be allowed inside in groups to avoid a crowd crush. According to some accounts, visitors believed that the painting was illuminated from behind using a lamp because the moonlight was so realistic, and sought to find the source of light during the exhibition.{{Cite book|last=Ermilchenko|first=MV|title=Знаменитые полотна русских живописцев|publisher=White City|year=2002|isbn=978-5-7793-0856-4|location=Moscow|pages=36–37|language=ru|trans-title=Famous paintings by Russian painters}}

References

{{reflist}}

{{Arkhip Kuindzhi}}

{{Russian Museum}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Moonlit Night on the Dnieper}}

Category:1880 paintings

Category:Paintings by Arkhip Kuindzhi

Category:Collection of the Russian Museum

Category:Moon in art