Julius von Klever

Russian painter
Julius von Klever
Photograph of Julius von Klever
Klever, before 1900
Born(1850-01-31)31 January 1850
Dorpat, Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire
(modern Tartu, Estonia)
Died24 December 1924(1924-12-24) (aged 74)
Leningrad, Soviet Union
EducationMember Academy of Arts (1878)
Professor by rank (1881)
Alma materImperial Academy of Arts (1876)
Known forPainting
Notable workWinter Landscape (1883)
Winter (1876)
MovementRomanticism

Julius Sergius von Klever (31 January 1850, Tartu - 24 December 1924, Leningrad) was a Baltic German landscape painter.

Biography

His father was a chemist who taught pharmacology at the Veterinary Institute. He displayed artistic talent at an early age and took lessons from Konstantin von Kügelgen.[1] After completing his primary education, was enrolled at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts where, at his father's insistence, he studied architecture. After a short time, however, he began to take landscape painting classes; first with Sokrat Vorobiev, then Mikhail Clodt.[1]

In 1870, he was apparently expelled from the Academy, for unknown reasons.[1] Undeterred, he started exhibiting his works. In 1871, one was purchased by Count Pavel Stroganov and, the following year, his painting. "Sunset", was acquired by Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna. In 1874, he had his first solo exhibition at the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. After Tsar Alexander II expressed interest in his work, he was named an "Artist" by the Academy, despite having not graduated. In 1878, he became an "Academician".[1]

In 1879, he and the actor Vasily Samoylov (who was an amateur painter) spent some time working on Nargen island. The resulting works were purchased by Pavel Tretyakov and the Imperial Family, including Tsar Alexander III. Following this, the Academy named him a Professor. In 1885, he helped organize the Russian exhibit at the Exposition Universelle d'Anvers.[1]

During this time, he was overwhelmed with orders and often completed a painting in a single day. He sometimes employed assistants to do the underpainting. Their identities and the extent of their contributions has not been fully established.[citation needed]

In the late 1890s, a friend of his from the Academy was implicated in a scandal involving gambling and embezzlement. He was drawn into it and suffered a nervous breakdown that forced him to give up painting temporarily.[1] In 1908, he went to Germany with his family to avoid the situation and lived in Neustrelitz until 1915, when the war forced him to return home.

After the Revolution, he began receiving support from the "Society of Artists [ru]". For the rest of his life, he taught at the Academy (under its successive new Soviet names) and at the Art and Industry Academy, where he headed the department of "monumental" painting.

Three of his four children became painters; Maria (1878-1967) a theater artist, Julius (1882-1942) who taught at the Art and Industry Academy, and Oscar (1887-1975) a theater artist who also designed costumes.[2]

The artist's legacy

Von Klever's works are in the State Russian Museum, State Tretyakov Gallery, Odesa Fine Arts Museum, museums in Zaraisk, Barnaul, Vladimir, Volgograd, Kaluga, Kozmodemyansk, Kostroma, Krasnodar, Lipetsk, Veliky Novgorod, Sevastopol, Semey, Serpukhov, Stavropol, Syktyvkar, Tambov, Ulyanovsk, Almaty, Yerevan, Voronezh; in private collections.

The quick success of Von Klever gave him many orders. Sometimes creating a picture a day, Klever began to quickly brush over the underpainting, made by his assistants. This is how numerous works by "Von Klever and the Studio" appeared. The most famous of his collaborators was Prince Nikolai Obolensky.[3] Count Muravyov was named among the successors of the Klever style in painting.[4]

Selected paintings

  • Winter
    Winter
  • Village on Nargen
    Village on Nargen
  • Sunset in the Winter
    Sunset in the Winter
  • Evening
    Evening
  • The Brushwood Collector
    The Brushwood Collector
  • Before the Storm
    Before the Storm
  • Pond with White Lilies
    Pond with White Lilies
  • Approaching Blizzard
    Approaching Blizzard
  • Drecheluki Country Estate
    Drecheluki Country Estate

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Brief biography @ RusArtNet.
  2. ^ The Klever family Archived 2014-03-08 at the Wayback Machine @ Tsarskoye Selo
  3. ^ "КЛЕВЕР • Большая российская энциклопедия - электронная версия". bigenc.ru. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  4. ^ "Русская живопись. Граф Владимир Муравьев.. Обсуждение на LiveInternet - Российский Сервис Онлайн-Дневников". www.liveinternet.ru. Retrieved 2021-10-14.

Further reading

  • Valery Zhiglov, Художник Ю. Ю. Клевер (1850 – 1924), Litres, 2016 ISBN 5-04-003225-0

• Alfried Nehring: JULIUS VON KLEVER Maler am Mare Baltikum [Bildbiografie] 2019(deutsch), Selbstverlag, in Leinen gebunden mit farbigem Schutzumschlag, 88 S., 112 farbige Abb., Format A4, ISBN 978-3-941064-75-1

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julius von Klever.
  • ArtNet: More works by Klever.
  • Julius von Klever Archived 2017-06-25 at the Wayback Machine @ Funeral-SPB.ru
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