ID 326926
Lot 43 | BUTORIN, DMITRY
Estimate value
£ 30 000 – 40 000
U lukomoriia dub zelionyi...
Provenance: Possibly, collection of the writer Boris Pilniak (1894-1938), Moscow.
Important private collection, Europe.
Literature: Possibly, G. Zhidkov, Pushkin v iskusstve Palekha, Moscow-Leningrad, 1937, p. 159, mentioned in the text.
Authenticity of the work has been confirmed by expert Yu. Rybakova.
U lukomoriia dub zelionyi..., a picture by one of the most celebrated Palekh artists, Dmitry Butorin, is a very rare and extremely interesting example of the use of the renowned lacquer-work miniature composition to create a large-scale easel painting. Lukomorye is a fictional land in Russian folklore and nowadays is usually associated with Pushkin’s fairy-tale poem Ruslan and Lyudmila, to which “A green oak stands by Lukomorye” is the opening line of the prologue.
The artist first turned to this Pushkin-inspired subject in 1925, shortly after the founding of the Artel of Ancient Painting for former Palekh icon painters who were forced to look for new ways of realising their creative potential. Subsequently, one of them, Alexander Kotukhin, was to recall: “When we organised the artel, we only had a collection of Pushkin’s works in Sytin’s edition for seven people. This largely explains why, at that time, we based most of our miniature paintings on Pushkin’s stories.”
During the artel’s first ten years, Butorin created a whole gallery of works that, in one way or another, rang the changes on depictions of Lukomorye. According to the artel’s documents, starting in 1925 with the painting of his Tea Caddy and a casket, the artist painted three more versions of this composition in the following year, two more in 1927, five in 1928, another two in 1929, four in 1930, and three in 1932. Caskets and small cases from the series are now to be found in the collections of the Russian Museum, the Museum of Decorative and Applied Arts, the Nizhny Novgorod and Ivanovo Art Museums and the Palekh Museum, as well as the Pushkin Apartment Museum on Moika.
The literary origin of these and similar works attracted a striking interest in Palekh art among writers in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Many prominent men of letters began to converge on Palekh, including Ilya Ehrenburg, Valentin Kataev, Nikolai Zarudin, Boris Pilnyak and Paul Couturier. Alexei Tolstoy and Maxim Gorky, Henri Barbusse and Romain Rolland were fascinated by the art of the Palekh miniatures.
In particular, in his 1933 article on the Palekh craftsmen, the writer Efim Vikhrev noted Butorin’s latest and, in his view, most successful composition on the Lukomorye theme: “in the latest version, Butorin, with his characteristic refinement, developed the introduction to the poem [Pushkin’s Ruslan and Lyudmila,] without ignoring a single word. In the first version there were only the hut on hen’s legs, the oak tree, the cat on a golden chain, the wood spirit, the knights and the mermaid, whereas the latest version is the full and definitive interpretation of Pushkin’s text. Since the Lukomorye poem states, “And there I stayed, and drank of mead...”, Butorin was right in thinking: “‘I’ is Pushkin and, dressing Pushkin in a gold-embroidered kaftan, he placed him, attentive and thoughtful, near the oak tree with a scroll in one hand and a goose quill in the other. Butorin progressed through the lines of the poem without neglecting a single word ... (he) also radically altered the composition stylistically ... in the first version, the mermaid was reclining, in the latest she is sitting ... the oak is treated quite differently, it is presented more realistically and forms the emerald-coloured centre of the picture, around which, without overlapping each other and at the same time with purely Pushkinian conciseness, all the other elements of the picture are arranged” (Efim Vikhrev, Pushkin i Gorky v iskusstve Palekha, Novy mir, No. 9, 1933, p. 235).
It is highly likely to be this version that was transformed, with consummate elegance and slight alteration, into the painting. The transformation was probably initiated by a commission from Boris Pilnyak, who had repeatedly visited Palekh and in whose house the picture was seen, shortly before the writer’s arrest in 1937, by German Zhidkov (G.V. Zhidkov, Pushkin v iskusstve Palekha, Moscow-Leningrad, 1937, p. 159). Pilnyak was a close friend of Butorin’s, and he devoted to him – “a truly fine artist and a fine man at the dawn of cloudy youth, a lyric poet, altruistic in every way” – whole pages of his novel The Ripening of the Fruit, published in 1935 in the magazine Novy Mir. Unlike his fellow writer, Efim Vikhrev, who valued the “concessions to realism” in this new departure in Butorin’s Lukomorye, Pilnyak, on the contrary, cherished the master’s perpetuation of the icon-painting tradition, which was still evident both in the composition’s actual design and in the development of the individual images and figures. What is more, he saw in that work not only the world of Pushkin’s imagery and a depiction of the poet, but also a self-portrait of the artist himself: “Dmitry Nikolaevich Butorin, who loved the sixteenth-century colouring of Russian icon painting, whereby he is strangely reminiscent of the Dutch masters, painted U lukomoriia dub zelionyi..., depicting himself alongside Pushkin in the image of the learned cat with its gold chain and gold-rimmed glasses” (B. Pilnyak, Sozrevanie plodov / Sobranie sochinenii v shesti tomakh, Moscow, 2004, vol. 6).
Auction house category: | Russian art |
---|
Auction house category: | Russian art |
---|
Address of auction |
MacDougall Arts Ltd. 33 St James’s Square SW1Y 4JS London United Kingdom | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Preview |
| ||||||||||||||
Phone | +44 20 7389 8160 | ||||||||||||||
Phone | +7 495 799 4683 | ||||||||||||||
Fax | +44 (0) 20 7389 8170 | ||||||||||||||
Buyer Premium | 27 % | ||||||||||||||
Conditions of purchase | Conditions of purchase | ||||||||||||||
Business hours | Business hours
|
Related terms
Frequently asked questions
First of all, you should register to be able to purchase at auction. After confirming your email address, enter your personal information in your user profile, such as your first name, last name, and mail address. Choose a lot from the upcoming auction and the maximum amount you want to place on it. After confirmation of your choice, we will send your application by e-mail to the appropriate auction house. If the auction house accepts a request, it will participate in the auction. You can view the current status of a bid at any time in your personal account in the "Bids" section.
Auctions are performed by auction houses and each of the auction houses describes their terms of auction. You can see the texts in the section "Auction information".
The results of the auction are published within a few days after the end of the auction. In the top menu of the site, find the tab "Auctions". Click on it and you will be on the auction catalog page, where you can easily find the category "Results". After opening it, select the desired auction from the list, enter and view the current status of the interested lot.
The information about the auction winners is confidential. The auction winner will receive a direct notification from the auction house responsible with instructions for further action: an invoice for payment and the manner in which the goods will be received.
Each of the auction houses has its own payment policy for the won lots. All auction houses accept bank transfers, most of them accept credit card payments. In the near future you will find detailed information for each case in the section "Auction information" on the page of the auction catalog and the lot.
Shipment of the won lot depends on its size. Small items can be delivered by post. Larger lots are sent by courier. Employees of the auction houses will offer you a wide range to choose from.
No. The archive serves as a reference for the study of auction prices, photographs and descriptions of works of art.