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Pavel Varfolomevich Kusnetsov (1878–1968) was a Russian painter and graphic artist. He studied at Saratov at Bogolyubov Art School (1891-6), then Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1897–1904) and for a year in Paris (1905). His early paintings were exhibited by the Mir Iskusstva group, and he was closely associated with the Russian Symbolists. He helped to organize the Crimson Rose exhibition (1904) and was a founder and leader of the Blue Rose in 1907. He taught at the Stroganov Institute (1917–18; 1945-8) and at the Moscow Institute of Fine Arts (1918–37). He headed the painting section of Narkompros until 1921, but fell out of official favour with the advent of Socialist Realism. Kuznetsov's early paintings are typical of the Blue Rose group's poetic explorations of an interior, imaginative world through archetypal symbols. After 1910 he drew increasingly on folk culture, continuing to draw on the rich colours and harmonious rhythms of the Symbolists but simplifying his compositions to depict the everyday life of village communities of Kirghizstan in Central Asia. ==Works== File:Kuznetsov GoluboyFontan.jpg|''Blue Fountain'', 1905 File:Kuznetsov vstepi.jpg|''In the steppes. Mirage'', 1911 File:KuznetsovNatyurmortsGravyuroy.jpg|''Still life with a Japanese Engraving'', 1912 File:Kuznetsov EasternMotive.jpg|''Eastern Motive'', 1913-1914 File:KuznetsovSborPlodov.jpg|Harvesting of Fruits, 1913-1914 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Pavel Kuznetsov」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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