Alexei Pakhomov | |
Birth Date: | 1900 10, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Varlamovo, Kadnikovsky Uyezd, Vologda Governorate, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Nationality: | Russian |
Field: | Painter |
Training: | School of Technical Drawing of Baron Alexander von Stieglitz State Higher Institute of Art and Technology |
Movement: | Russian avant-garde |
Works: | Leningrad in the Days of the Blockade |
Awards: | State Stalin Prize People's Artist of the USSR |
Alexei Fedorovich Pakhomov (– 14 April 1973) was a Russian painter. He was known as a master of lithography.[1] Early in his career, he was a illustrator for children's books. His work during World War II earned him the State Stalin Prize. He later became a professor of art and was named a People's Artist of the USSR.
Pakhomov was born into a peasant family in a small village. Pakhomov's father was the head of the village, providing him the opportunity to access paper. Pakhomov began to draw as a hobby. People came to see his drawings, and soon a local landlord named Zubov invited him to visit. During those visits, Zubov offered him drawing papers and crayons. Zubov also showed him the works of Surikov and Repin. When Pakhomov finished primary education at the village school, Zubov arranged for Alexei to go to high school in Kadnikov.
In 1915, Zubov's father, former actor Yuri Zubov, collected money for Pakhomov to study in Petrograd at the Stieglitz Art School, where his teachers were N. Shukhaev, Sergey Chekhonin, Mstislav Dobuzhinsky, and Alexander Savinov. He remained there until 1917. From 1921, the young artist studied at the Vkhutemas under V. Lebedev, N. Tyrsa, and A. Karev.
Due to the October Revolution and the Russian Civil War, Pakhomov's studies were drawn out until 1925, when he graduated from Vkhutemas. In 1921–1923, he joined the Circle of Artists movement.
Pakhomov died 14 April 1973.
Pakhomov was a graphic artist known for his contributions to children's book illustrations. While he also created some colorful, renowned easel paintings, his primary focus was on depicting picturesque childhood scenes of peasant children. In the 1920s, Pakhomov conducted trips to Young Pioneer summer camps, where he studied children's special plasticity and expressions in natural surroundings.
During this period, Soviet illustrators changed their approach to children's book illustrations, replacing traditional images with dynamic, colorful, and emotionally engaging pictures that integrated with the text rather than merely accompanying it. Additionally, they reimagined fonts and book covers.
In 1926, Pakhomov co-founded the Artists' Society and actively participated in their exhibitions until 1931. His work gained international recognition when it was displayed at a Soviet art exhibition in Osaka, Japan, in 1927. Subsequently, he collaborated with magazines such as Chizh and Ezh, as well as authors like E. L. Schwartz, S. Marshak, and G. Krutov, creating illustrations for their children's books.
In the first half of the 1930s, Pakhomov found himself in a difficult situation given the Soviet Union's narrowing official view of art and campaign against "formalism". His paintings, in which half-naked young men and women tan in the sun, were the object of severe criticism. The artist had to choose whether to give up his professional principles or some parts of his art. He chose the latter, concentrating on graphic work and limiting himself even more by almost completely giving up color in his illustrations.
When Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union during Operation Barbarossa, there was a need for propaganda placards and posters calling citizens to aid the war effort. Pakhomov hurried to Leningrad to do what he could to help. In July 1941, he helped dig anti-tank moats at Moloskovitza station. During the next three years, Pakhomov remained in besieged Leningrad. Between 1942 and 1944, he produced a series of lithographs, Leningrad in the Days of the Blockade, in which he strove to bring forward the very real emotion of the siege of Leningrad: the uniqueness of this particular setting of place and time and the consequent human suffering and strength of spirit. The series earned him the State Stalin Prize in 1946. During the siege, his workshop was hit by a bomb that came through the roof, smashed through the floor, and blew up two floors below, destroying some of his works.
The Russian Institute of Blood Transfusions asked him to cooperate, where he met Vladimir Konashevich, V. Dvorakovsky, and Dmitry Mitrokhin. He received a poster-making order from V. Serov, who was chairman of the Leningrad Union of Artists at the time.
Between 1944 and 1947, Pakhomov worked on the series In Our City, in which the artist strove to reflect the grand scale of the postwar effort to rebuild ruined Leningrad and to reinstate its formerly vibrant life. The presence of female workers in every traditionally male trade is a reminder of the recent war, which killed millions of Russians. In 1948, he began teaching at the Il’ya Repin Institute of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture. He became a professor the following year.
In the final period of his work, in the 1950s and 1960s, Pakhomov tried to revive his work after it became a bit too dry, perhaps too influenced by the strongly dogmatic requirements of post-war Russia. In the 1960s he even returned to the use of color but his work during this period did not gain much critical acclaim.