A hall of theatrical panels by Marc Chagall opens in the Tretyakov Gallery. Art & More: six facts about Marc Chagall, or the artist’s new panels in the Tretyakov Gallery Why is the goat green

Marc Chagall. Above the city. 1918, Moscow

The paintings of Marc Chagall (1887-1985) are surreal and unique. His early work “Above the City” is no exception.

The main characters, Marc Chagall himself and his beloved Bella, are flying over their native Vitebsk (Belarus).

Chagall portrayed the most pleasant feeling in the world. The feeling of mutual love. When you can't feel the ground under your feet. When you become one with your loved one. When you don't notice anything around. When you just fly with happiness.

Background of the picture

When Chagall began painting Above the City in 1914, he and Bella had known each other for 5 years. But 4 of which they spent apart.

He is the son of a poor Jewish laborer. She is the daughter of a rich jeweler. At the time of meeting, a completely unsuitable candidate for an enviable bride.

He went to Paris to study and make a name for himself. He returned and achieved his goal. They married in 1915.

This is happiness that Chagall wrote. The happiness of being with the love of your life. Despite the difference in social status. Despite the family's protests.

The main characters of the picture

With the flight everything is more or less clear. But you may wonder why lovers don't look at each other.

Perhaps because Chagall depicted the souls of happy people, not their bodies. And in fact, bodies cannot fly. But souls may well.

Marc Chagall. Above the city (fragment). 1918 Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

And souls do not have to look at each other. The main thing for them is to feel unity. Here we see him. Each soul has one hand, as if they really had almost merged into a single whole.

He, as a bearer of a stronger masculine principle, is written more roughly. In a cubic manner. Bella is femininely graceful and woven from rounded and smooth lines.

And the heroine is dressed in soft blue. But it does not merge with the sky, because it is gray.

The couple stands out well against the background of such a sky. And it seems as if it is very natural to fly above the ground.

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Image of the city

It seems that we see all the signs of a town, or rather a large village, which Vitebsk was 100 years ago. There is a temple and houses here. And an even more pompous building with columns. And, of course, a lot of fences.

Marc Chagall. Above the city (detail). 1918 Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

But still the city is somehow different. The houses are deliberately skewed, as if the artist does not know perspective and geometry. A sort of childish approach.

This makes the town more fabulous, like a toy. Strengthens our feeling of being in love.

Indeed, in this state the world around is significantly distorted. Everything becomes more joyful. And a lot of things are not noticed at all. The lovers don't even notice the green goat.

Why is a goat green?

Marc Chagall loved the color green. Which is not surprising. After all, this is the color of life, youth. And the artist was a person with a positive worldview. Just look at his phrase “Life is an obvious miracle.”

He was a Hasidic Jew by origin. And this is a special worldview that is instilled from birth. It is based on cultivating joy. Hasidim should even pray joyfully.

Therefore, it is not surprising that he depicted himself in a green shirt. And the goat in the background is green.

Marc Chagall. Fragment with a green goat in the painting “Above the City.”

In other paintings he even has green faces. So a green goat is not the limit.

Marc Chagall. Green violinist (fragment). 1923-1924 Guggenheim Museum, New York

But this does not mean that if it is a goat, it must be green. Chagall has a self-portrait where he paints the same landscape as in the painting “Above the City.”

And there is a red goat. The painting was created in 1917, and red, the color of the revolution that had just broken out, penetrates the artist’s palette.

Marc Chagall. Self-portrait with a palette. 1917 Private collection

Why are there so many fences?

The fences are surreal. They don't frame yards as they should. And they stretch in an endless line, like rivers or roads.

There were actually a lot of fences in Vitebsk. But, of course, they simply surrounded the houses. But Chagall decided to place them in a row, thereby highlighting them. Making them almost a symbol of the city.

It’s impossible not to mention this shameless guy under the fence.

It’s like you look at the picture first. And feelings of romance and airiness cover you. Even a green goat doesn’t spoil the pleasant impression much.

And suddenly the gaze stumbles upon a man in an indecent pose. The feeling of idyll begins to disappear.

Marc Chagall. Detail of the painting “Above the City.”

Why does the artist deliberately add a fly in the ointment?

Because Chagall is not a storyteller. Yes, the world of lovers is distorted and becomes like a fairy tale. But this is still life, with its ordinary and mundane moments.

And there is also a place for humor in this life. It's harmful to take everything too seriously.

Why is Chagall so unique?

To understand Chagall, it is important to understand him as a person. And his character was special. He was an easy-going, easy-going, talkative person.

He loved life. Believed in true love. He knew how to be happy.

And he really managed to be happy.

Lucky, many will say. I don't think it's a matter of luck. And in a special attitude. He was open to the world and trusted this world. Therefore, willy-nilly, he attracted the right people, the right customers.

Hence the happy marriage with his first wife Bella. Successful emigration and recognition in Paris. A long, very long life (the artist lived for almost 100 years).

Of course, one can recall the very unpleasant story with Malevich, who literally “took away” Chagall’s school in 1920. Having lured all his students with very bright speeches about Suprematism*.

This is also why the artist and his family left for Europe.

Marc Chagall's panels for the Jewish theater GOSET are absolutely beautiful works. They are beautiful, spectacular, very decorative, easy to understand and at the same time full of unsolvable mysteries. Having lain for half a century, rolled up in museum storerooms, in the 90s. restored and then toured to exhibitions in 46 cities around the world, reproduced in numerous publications, thoroughly studied, they finally found peace in the halls of the permanent exhibition of twentieth-century art. Tretyakov Gallery. Where they belong, of course, since they are not only wonderful works of art, but also excellent material for educational excursions about the connection between folklore and the avant-garde, the purely national with the universal, and the artist’s ability to immortalize the deeply personal.

There will be changes

Moving Chagall's panels to the permanent exhibition of twentieth-century art. The Tretyakov Gallery is one of the steps to change the halls on Krymsky Val and attract the public there. The museum is already carrying out preparatory work for its radical renovation.

The panels for the State Jewish Theater were painted by Chagall in two months in 1920 - and this simple information helps to understand both the meaning and plots, as well as the fate of the seven famous paintings. The time of writing determines the skill of the 35-year-old artist, who had already had success and was experienced in all the innovations of Russian and European art, including theatrical art, as well as the freedom and audacity with which he worked - the cult of artistic experimentation reigned in the country. And the fact that the panels were painted quickly - there were nine of them in total, seven have survived - can explain some of the adventurism, or daring, of their cheerful subjects.

The fact that the works were created for the Jewish theater also determined their fate - the panels were transferred to the Tretyakov Gallery after the theater was closed in 1949 during the period of “the fight against cosmopolitanism,” but they were removed from GOSET earlier, during the fight against formalism in 1937. At the Tretyakov Gallery, the panels lay in storage until Marc Chagall’s triumphant arrival in Moscow in 1973. When he saw them, the artist shed tears and, at the request of the museum staff, signed them.

Well, naturally, in his work for the Jewish Museum, Chagall made full use of his favorite subjects and characters - everything connected with his native world of provincial Jewish life. He also depicted himself, his wife and daughter, and wrote the names of his relatives in Yiddish in the most unexpected places of the compositions. His muses - and for the theater it is natural and necessary to portray muses - were the constant characters of Jewish weddings. The green-faced klezmer (a violinist who played at weddings) embodied music, the badkhan (jester and wedding toastmaster) embodied theater, the fat matchmaker embodied dance, and the Torah copyist symbolized literature. In the panel “Love on Stage” the bride and groom are also visible. And the long panel frieze depicts a table laden with festive dishes. The Jewish wedding becomes the main metaphor of the theater, and the panels themselves become theatrical plots with main and secondary characters, with many mise-en-scenes.

The largest panel, “Introduction to the Jewish Museum,” can be viewed and deciphered for hours, there are so many images of real people of the GOSET theater, as well as roosters, goats, flying cows, allusions and metaphors. Not all of them were understandable even to Chagall’s contemporaries and fellow tribesmen. As art critic Alexandra Shatskikh writes, theater director and European Alexey Granovsky did not understand why he was depicted with his feet dipped into a basin of water. It turns out that devout Jews immersed their feet in cold water to avoid falling asleep while reading holy books. Numerous interpreters are also thrown into some confusion by the man in a cap written in the corner of the picture, peeing on a pig. This could exactly explain the translation of one of the inscriptions: “I’m playing around.”

A quarter of a century has passed since the famous theatrical panels Marc Chagall, about the work on which the artist wrote: “ He portrayed the ancestors of the modern actor: here is a wandering musician, a wedding jester, a dancer, a copyist of the Torah, he is also the first poet-dreamer and, finally, a couple of acrobats on stage", were restored.

Chagall performed a cycle of nine works, of which only seven have survived, commissioned by the State Jewish Theater (GOSET) under the direction of Alexei Granovsky. Founded in 1920 in Petrograd, the theater moved to Moscow a year later and first occupied a building on Chernyshevsky Lane, but two years later it moved to where the Moscow Drama Theater on Malaya Bronnaya is located today.

Chagall designed the hall where in 1921 the performance (the first in the repertoire) was shown at an evening in memory of the writer Sholom Aleichem. The artist worked for two months and is said to have completed the process just a few minutes before the curtain went up.

The legendary actor Solomon Mikhoels, according to legend, looked at the sketches of the panel for a long time and said: “You know, I studied your sketches. And I understood them. This forced me to completely change the interpretation of the image. I learned to use my body, gestures, and words differently.”

Panel "Introduction to the Jewish Theater"
1920

The large panel "Introduction to the Theatre", full of symbols that, as always, can be deciphered with curiosity, was intended for the central wall. In the spaces between the windows, Chagall placed gigantic allegories of art forms, including “Music” (“Wandering Musician”), “Theater” (“The Wedding Jester”), “Dance” (“Dancer”), “Literature” (“ Scribe of the Torah").

It is curious that the action in the compositions does not unfold from right to left, as in Hebrew, but from left to right. The restorers managed to find out that the master mixed clay into the tempera and gouache, making the images glow from the inside.

"Theater", "Music", "Dance"
1920

In 1949, GOSET was liquidated, and Chagall's works ended up in the Tretyakov Gallery.

After restoration and display in the museum in 1991, the panels went on tour, over the years visiting forty-five cities around the world. And only now for their return in the permanent exhibition of the museum on Krymsky Val, a whole hall is finally being devoted to Chagall’s cycle, which will open on July 16.

He lived for almost a century, was a Soviet commissar, but gained world fame in exile. The largest exhibition of paintings by Marc Chagall has opened in Moscow. It's called "Hello Motherland": the famous artist is our compatriot.

He was born at the end of the century before last in Vitebsk. The canvases were brought literally from all over the world: from Russian and foreign museums, as well as from private collections. Visitors to the exhibition will see Chagall's works collected together for the first time - from early Vitebsk works to masterpieces of the French period.

Our correspondent Alexander Kazakevich was one of the first to see the exhibition. He walked through the halls of the Tretyakov Gallery with the granddaughters of the great master.

This is so officially announced that today is the opening of the largest exhibition of Marc Chagall. In fact, the exhibition was opened a little earlier, when two of his granddaughters flew in from Paris. They walked in fascination among the still unmounted gigantic exhibition. They lingered especially long at the portraits of Bella Chagall, their Russian grandmother.

Meret Mayer, Chagall's granddaughter: "This is my grandmother, but the little figure is my mother, she is probably only a year old here."

These magical flights and Bella’s embraces became Mark Zakharovich’s favorite theme. Maret knows that she is very similar to her grandmother.

Meret Mayer, Chagall's granddaughter: “I knew my grandmother only from paintings. This one is my favorite, she was always in my parents’ house and I always felt how much tenderness and love came from her.”

Bella Mayer, Chagall's granddaughter: "I was named after my grandmother, so she was my ideal, which I always imitated."

But it was the granddaughters who had to say whether it was possible or not to collect the most famous paintings of the master from all over the world - from the Tretyakov Gallery, the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg, museums in New York, Paris, Nice, and private collections. Chagall has never been collected so completely before.

The Tretyakov Gallery has a special attitude towards Chagall; here they call him the “breadwinner”, because even in the most difficult times, his paintings were always invited to participate in Western exhibitions - this was paid for and replenished the Tretyakov Gallery’s small budget.

There are many intimate details here for gallery employees. These are Chagall's works for the Jewish theater. When he flew to the USSR in 1973, he cried when he saw that they had been preserved, and signed his autographs on the works, confusing the Latin letters and the Cyrillic alphabet out of excitement.

Ekaterina Selezneva, curator of the exhibition: “We all owe Chagall, and that’s why today we read the title as “Hello, Chagall.”

A mysterious man and his magical art. He compared Paris with Vitebsk, from where he had to emigrate, and his works with the work of Charlie Chaplin. He also reminded the twentieth century of the little man in his joys and his love. Chagall wrote: “Perhaps Europe will love me, and with it my Russia.” To see these paintings together in Moscow, true Chagall connoisseurs flew from Europe and America. For example, according to his will, Chagall's "Trinity" is prohibited from being removed from the Nice Museum. But here she is in Moscow. As an exception. And all visitors understand that such a worldwide phenomenon of a master returning to his homeland may not happen again.

Posta-Magazine collected

the most interesting facts about the artist and his works.

Over the past quarter century, panels painted for the Jewish Theater have traveled all over the world, from the Pacific coast of the United States to Japan, visiting 46 cities. But they were exhibited in Moscow only twice: they were shown after restoration in 1991 and at the Marc Chagall retrospective exhibition in 2005. And now, for the first time in these years, the city has the opportunity to include them in the permanent exhibition of the Tretyakov Gallery.

Marc Chagall received an order to decorate the theater in 1920, after GOSET moved from Petrograd to Moscow. The chronicle says that the artist then responded to the order with great enthusiasm. “Here is an opportunity to overturn the old Jewish theater with its psychological naturalism and false beards. Finally, I will be able to turn around and here, on the walls, express what I consider necessary for the revival of the national theater,”- he said.

In just two months, the master created 9 panels, of which, however, only 7 survived. After the theater was closed in 1949, the panels were transferred to the Tretyakov Gallery and later restored. The exhibition currently occupies Hall No. 9, and you can admire it until mid-December. After which the works will go to Montreal, to a major exhibition of Marc Chagall, and then return home again.

While you are wondering whether these works are worth looking at, Posta-Magazine has collected the most interesting facts about the artist.

The future famous avant-garde artist was born in the small Belarusian city of Vitebsk - there is still a legend that one day a boy will be born in this place who will glorify the city. On that day, July 7, 1887, a large and terrible fire broke out in Vitebsk, burning half the city. The elements did not touch only a few houses, including the one where Chagall was born. Later, the artist will tell you that it was for this reason that all his life he experienced a craving for changing places (the crib with the baby was constantly moved from corner to corner during a fire) and so often in his paintings he depicted the fire that spared him. He painted the element in the form of a rooster with a fire tree growing from the body of the bird. And from then on, the color red meant both life and death for the artist at the same time.

Legend has it that Marc Chagall and Kazimir Malevich were at enmity all their lives. And that it was the author of “Black Square” who expelled his “colleague” from his native Vitebsk, filling the entire city with futuristic posters and busts, which greatly offended Chagall. “Gypsum busts that were vying with each other to order from half-educated sculptors from my school. I'm afraid they were all washed away long ago by the Vitebsk rains. My poor Vitebsk!”- he wrote in his book.

Marc Chagall lived most of his life in France. But first he left for Moscow, and for a somewhat more banal reason - he was forced to do so by the Red Commissars who seized power. Then, in 1920, the artist was ordered to paint the Jewish Chamber Theater, which at that time was directed by Alexey Granovsky. It took Chagall forty days to create a masterpiece, but the theater management was dissatisfied - he was not paid for the work. Later, Stanislavsky did the same with him at the Moscow Art Theater.

Disappointed, Chagall left his homeland soon after these events and went to France. But, as you know, “every cloud has a silver lining,” over time, Chagall became the only artist in the world whose stained glass windows decorated religious buildings of several faiths: synagogues, Lutheran churches, Catholic churches - a total of 15 buildings in the USA, Europe and Israel.

Specially commissioned by French President Charles de Gaulle, Chagall designed the ceiling of the Grand Opera in Paris, and soon after that he painted two panels for the New York Metropolitan Opera. In July 1973, a museum called “The Biblical Message” opened in Nice, decorated with the works of the artist, who after some time was awarded national status by the government.

By the way, the works of Marc Chagall, along with the paintings of Pablo Picasso and Joan Miro, are considered the most sought after among painting thieves - today more than half a thousand of his works are listed as missing. Isn’t this the main sign of the author’s popularity?

The loving Chagall is also called the instigator of the sexual revolution in painting - for his love of depicting naked women. The artist's first model was called Thea Brahman. She was the daughter of the famous Vitebsk doctor Wolf Brachman and Chagall's first love. He did not have money for models, so the young lady posed for the young talent for free.

By the way, it was Thea who introduced Marc Chagall to his future wife and the love of his life, Bella Rosenfeld. She also posed for him at first, then waited for her to return from Paris, and then, as the artist himself joked, “it all ended with a wedding crown.” They gave birth to a daughter, Ida, and lived in love and harmony for 19 years, until Bella died in America. Chagall grieved and soon connected his life with the divorced wife of the Irish artist Virginia Haggard, with whom he gave birth to a boy named David. But Virginia left her husband, falling in love with a photographer, and Chagall married again a few years later - to Valentina Brodskaya, the daughter of a manufacturer and sugar factory. Like all his other wives, she was from a wealthy family.

Another legend says that when Marc Chagall was not in the mood, he liked to paint either biblical scenes with the obligatory crucifixion, or wildflowers, among which thistles and cornflowers especially stood out. The inhabitants preferred to buy the second one, which greatly upset the artist.

Marc Chagall is often called a gravity breaker. These flying images of people in love seem to leave no one indifferent. Another legend says that a certain gypsy woman once told the artist that he would live a long and rich life, love extraordinary women and die in flight. And what do you think - the prediction came true: on March 28, 1985, the 98-year-old artist entered the elevator to go to the second floor of his French mansion, and during this short flight his heart stopped.