Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
JOZEF OLESZKIEWICZ AS A PARTICIPANT OF AN ACADEMIC EXHIBITION IN 1814. / Egorova, K.B.
In: Slavic World in the Third Millennium, Vol. 18, No. 3-4, 2023, p. 66-74.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - JOZEF OLESZKIEWICZ AS A PARTICIPANT OF AN ACADEMIC EXHIBITION IN 1814
AU - Egorova, K.B.
N1 - Export Date: 27 October 2024 Сведения о финансировании: Russian Science Foundation, RSF, 19-18-00073-P Текст о финансировании 1: The research was carried out with the support of the Russian Science Foundation \u2116 19-18-00073-P \u201CNational identity in the imperial policy of memory: the history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish-Lithuanian state in historiography and social thought of the 19th \u2015 20th centuries\u201D. Текст о финансировании 2: Funding The research was carried out with the support of the Russian Science Foundation \u2116 19-18-00073-P \u201CNational identity in the imperial policy of memory: the history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Polish-Lithuanian state in historiography and social thought of the 19th \u2015 20th centuries\u201D.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Jozef Oleszkiewicz, a native of the Polish-Lithuanian lands, was a talented portrait painter who settled on the banks of the Neva at the beginning of the 19th century and was elected academician of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Oleszkiewicz was known to the Polish community of St. Petersburg not only as an artist who had his own unique painting style and gained popularity among the fair sex for his ability to create inspired portraits of women, but also as a mystic, philosopher, and inspired poet. Now Oleszk-iewicz is known primarily as the hero of Adam Mickiewicz’s poem “Dziady”. Part III of the poem, completed in 1832, contains the “Oleszkiewicz” section. On the eve of the famous St. Petersburg flood of 1824, the artist uttered a prophecy that correlated with the biblical plot and marked the beginning of the formation of an apocalyptic myth about the death of the city from the Neva waters. Despite the major historical and cultural significance of Oleszkiewicz’s personality and work for Polish culture in the first quarter of the 19th century, the artist’s biography needs additional study, and there are no special research works devoted to his artistic career. The personality of the artist received a mythological interpretation in historiography; the real person disappeared into the artistic image created by Mickiewicz. It seems necessary to fill the gaps that exist in our knowledge about the life and work of this Polish-Lithuanian artist, to con-duct additional archival research, which will help not only to clarify some details of his biography, but also in the future to find and attribute his paintings. The article is devoted to Oleszkiewicz’s participation in the academic exhibition of 1814 and to establishing the names of the paintings that were exhibited by Oleszkiewicz in that year. The study was conducted on archival materials (Russian State Historical Archive). © 2023, Institute for Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
AB - Jozef Oleszkiewicz, a native of the Polish-Lithuanian lands, was a talented portrait painter who settled on the banks of the Neva at the beginning of the 19th century and was elected academician of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Oleszkiewicz was known to the Polish community of St. Petersburg not only as an artist who had his own unique painting style and gained popularity among the fair sex for his ability to create inspired portraits of women, but also as a mystic, philosopher, and inspired poet. Now Oleszk-iewicz is known primarily as the hero of Adam Mickiewicz’s poem “Dziady”. Part III of the poem, completed in 1832, contains the “Oleszkiewicz” section. On the eve of the famous St. Petersburg flood of 1824, the artist uttered a prophecy that correlated with the biblical plot and marked the beginning of the formation of an apocalyptic myth about the death of the city from the Neva waters. Despite the major historical and cultural significance of Oleszkiewicz’s personality and work for Polish culture in the first quarter of the 19th century, the artist’s biography needs additional study, and there are no special research works devoted to his artistic career. The personality of the artist received a mythological interpretation in historiography; the real person disappeared into the artistic image created by Mickiewicz. It seems necessary to fill the gaps that exist in our knowledge about the life and work of this Polish-Lithuanian artist, to con-duct additional archival research, which will help not only to clarify some details of his biography, but also in the future to find and attribute his paintings. The article is devoted to Oleszkiewicz’s participation in the academic exhibition of 1814 and to establishing the names of the paintings that were exhibited by Oleszkiewicz in that year. The study was conducted on archival materials (Russian State Historical Archive). © 2023, Institute for Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
KW - Belarusian painting
KW - heritage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania
KW - Imperial Academy of Arts
KW - Mickie-wicz
KW - Oleszkiewicz
KW - Polish culture
KW - Polish painting
KW - “Dziady”
U2 - 10.31168/2412-6446.2023.18.3-4.04
DO - 10.31168/2412-6446.2023.18.3-4.04
M3 - статья
VL - 18
SP - 66
EP - 74
JO - Славянский мир в третьем тысячелетии
JF - Славянский мир в третьем тысячелетии
SN - 2412-6446
IS - 3-4
ER -
ID: 126463314