For the first time, Russian painters turned to depicting ordinary people in the 19th century. Peasant children and rural schools appeared in the paintings of realists and the Peredvizhniki artists.
Vladimir Makovsky. In a Rural School, 1883
Tula fine art museumThey tended to show not only idyllic images and students’ bright faces, but also dramatic genre scenes, such as failing exams.
Dmitry Zhukov. Failed, 1885
The Volsk Local MuseumAlexei Korin. Failed Again, 1891
Kaluga fine art museumAlexei Korin. Reading, 1900
Far Еastern Art MuseumArtist Nikolai Bogdanov-Belsky created a whole series of genre paintings of peasant education. He depicted not only children, but also adults in the classroom. There is an interesting contrast between the appearance of pupils (often in lapti bast shoes and tattered clothing) and the neat atmosphere of the school.
Nikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. Sunday Reading at Country School, 1895
The Russian MuseumNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. A Rural School, 1890s
Public domainNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. Mental Arithmetic, 1895
Tretyakov GalleryNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. At the Doors of a School, 1897
The Russian MuseumNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. The Essay, 1903
The Russian MuseumNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. Beginners, 1904
Public DomainNikolai Bogdanov-Belsky. Children in a Class, 1918
Public DomainDuring the Soviet era, education became one of the key subjects of Socialist Realism, the only official art in the USSR. In those paintings, we see happy (and athletic) pioneers, students in school uniforms and preparations for September 1, which, from the 1930s, became the unified first day of the school year throughout the USSR (and, from 1984, an official day known as ‘Knowledge Day’).
Anatoly Volkov. 1st September, 1951
Public DomainIvan Tikhy. Admission to the pioneers, 1953
Ivan TikhyVladimir Serov. Homework, 1956
Public DomainTatyana Yablonskaya. Morning, 1954
Tretyakov Gallery/SputnikOne of the most famous paintings about school is Fyodor Reshetnikov’s ‘Low Marks Again’ (which, in a way, repeats the plot from Dmitry Zhukov’s painting ‘Failed’, 1885, but already in a new reality and setting. We see a whole palette of emotions - the shame on the face of the schoolboy, the sadness of his mother, the mockery of his younger brother and the reproach of his excelling sister. Only the dog sympathizes with the boy.
Fyodor Reshetnikov. Low Marks Again, 1952
Tretyakov Gallery/SputnikReshetnikov has a whole trilogy about a schoolboy - the below artwork ‘Reexamination’ shows the same boy bored with his studies, while the other boys are enjoying the summer.
Fyodor Reshetnikov. Reexamination, 1954
Fyodor ReshetnikovAnd the painting ‘Arrived on Vacation’ depicts an exemplary Suvorov cadet saluting his grandfather, whom he came to visit on winter vacation. The boy is obviously proud of his status and his uniform.
Fyodor Reshetnikov. Arrived on Vacation, 1948
Tretyakov Gallery/SputnikSergei Grigoriev, a social realist artist, created a series of genre paintings about school. He pointedly showed the social side of school - admission to the Komsomol youth organization - as a whole exam, where the student appears before a commission of similar schoolchildren.
Sergei Grigoriev. Admission to the Komsomol, 1949
National Art Museum of Ukraine/SputnikOr, for example, the frequent practice, in a special school assembly, of shaming a child for an F grade. Reproductions of this picture were widely circulated in Soviet schools.
Sergei Grigoriev. Discussion of the Low Mark, 1950
Tretyakov Gallery/SputnikDear readers,
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