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Marc Chagall, the eldest of nine
children, was born as Moyshe Segal in July 1887 in the Russian city
of Vitebsk. His mother wanted him to be a clerk/accountant,
but he saw his way through enrollment at Yehuda Pen's school of
Painting and Design.
In 1905, he moved to St. Petersburg
where he met Max Vinaver, one of the first Jewish deputies of Duma
(Parliament) who was impressed by Chagall's work. Chagall
entered the Zvantseva School where he was taught by Leon Bakst, one
of the leaders of the Symbolist art movement. In 1910 he
moved to Paris and by 1912 he moved to "La Rouche" where, according
to Chagall, "the artistic bohemia of ever land lived." He was
greatly influenced by Van Gogh, El Greco, Gauguin and Goya.
During this time he struck up a friendship with Apollinaire and
Chagall rejected the austerity of cubism in favor of a more lyrical
art on the principles of color theory (Orphism). Like French
Fauvres who used color without inhibition, Chagall moved toward an
expressionist art using "primitive" distortion, simplified line, and
large areas of bold unbroken color.
He was also greatly influenced by his
upbringing. Chagall once described "the mystique of
Hasidism" as one of the fundamental sources of his art.
According to Erich Neumann, "The warm, earthly fervor of Hasidic
mysticism - a universe where logic was overturned by magic and
metamorphosis, where reality became myth." In this fusion of
motifs taken from Jewish and Russian folk art, he began to develop
an original language of symbols - his "Chagallian" universe:
Floating lovers, a fiddler on the roof, flying horses, "blue air,
love and flowers."
In 1915 he married Bella and until
her death of a viral infection in 1944, she remained Chagall's
constant companion and inspiration.
In 1917, the October Revolution
brought the emancipation of the Jews in Russia. Until 1920, when
Chagall left Vitebsk for good, he moved to Moscow with Bella and
their daughter Ida (born in 1916). There he devoted his life
to running his Academy of Art. As conditions continued to
deteriorate, he left Russia for Berlin with a collection of
paintings and the nine notebooks containing the manuscript copy of
his life.
By September of that year, Chagall
was back in Paris, and for the next few years he worked tirelessly
to produce a series of etchings for Gogol's Dead Souls for Ambrose
Vollard. Other commissions followed: the seventeenth century
French classic, Fables of La Fontaine, Cirque and The Bible Series.
By 1927, Chagall was one of the leading painters of Ecole de Paris,
and his work was exhibited around the world.
During the 1920's and 1930's, Chagall
became the major proponent of the Surrealist, a term coined by
Apollinaire to describe his own play Les Mamelles de Teresias.
Andre Breton, the doctrine theorist of the Surrealist movement would
soon hail Chagall's work as "the triumphal appearance... of metaphor
of modern painting," "No work," he wrote, "was ever so resolutely so
magical." Ricatto Canudo, the editor of the avant-garde
periodical Montjoie!, described him as the "best colourist of our
day."
By 1941 France had become too
dangerous for Jews and Chagall with Bella - who were now French
citizens living in the south of France - accepted an invitation to
find sanctuary in the United States. They arrived in New York
on June 23rd, the day after German troops marched into Russia.
Nine months after Bella's death in
1944, he began work again on his first color lithographs for The
Four Tales of Arabian Nights. These thirteen compositions, published
in 1948 confirmed his artistic affinity for the medium.
While in the United States,
retrospective exhibitions were held at the New York Museum of Modern
Art and the Art Institute of Chicago. The following year his
works were exhibited at the Musee National d'Art Moderne in Paris.
In 1948, Chagall decided to return to
France. In 1952 he married again - a Russian Jewish emigre,
Valentina (Vava) Brodsky - the women with whom he would spend the
rest of his life.
He was again commissioned by Teriade
in 1952 to do a series of gouaches for Daphnis and Chloe. These
original studies comprised the forty-two lithographs that were
published in 1961 of the Daphnis and Chloe suite.
Concurrently, during 1956 he finished hand coloring The Bible series
for Teriade. In 1964 he completed his masterpiece in
lithography, The Circus (Le Cirque).
Throughout the rest of his life, he
continued to work in stained glass, costumes and sets for operas,
floor and wall mosaics, paintings and etchings, and lithography.
In 1975, then years before his death,
Marc Chagall finished the last of his great lithographic cycles,
Homer's Odyssey. In 1977 he was the recipient of France's
highest public honor. The Grand Cross of the Legion d'Honneur.
But an even a greater honor awaited him: He was buried in a Catholic
cemetery, embraced by the French as one of their own. Marc
Chagall might have been born an unregarded and impoverished Jew;
but, as his Russian surname is synonymous with "he strode", the
"poet-painter" of the twentieth century lived to be embraced as one
of the most influential artists of all time.
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