Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmyk Explained

Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmyk
Native Name:Фёдор Иванович Калмык
Native Name Lang:Russian
Birth Date:1763 or 1765
Birth Place:Kalmyk Khanate
Death Place:Karlsruhe, Grand Duchy of Baden
Nationality:Mongolian
German
Field:Painting
Training:Joseph Melling
Philipp Jakob Becker

Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmyk (1763 or 1765[1] – January 27, 1832), also known as Kalmyk (Russian Фёдор Иванович Калмык), was a Kalmyk painter and engraver. He called himself Feodor Ivannoff, and that is how he is listed in the Karlsruhe address books.[2] He also signed his will under that name.[3]

Life and work

Kalmyk was probably born on the Kalmyk Khanate. When the Kalmyks returned to the old settlement area on the Altai, he was captured by the Cossacks in 1770 and brought as a serf to St. Petersburg at the Tsar's court of Catherine the Great. There he was baptized and given his name. In 1773, Catherine gave the page boy to the Landgravine Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrücken, who was visiting St. Petersburg. Thence, Feodor traveled with her to Darmstadt.[4]

After the Landgravine's untimely death in March 1774, her daughter Friederike Amalie (1754–1832) took care of him. Feodor came to Karlsruhe on the occasion of her marriage to the Hereditary Prince of Baden Charles Louis (1755-1818), the eldest son of Margrave Charles Frederick of Baden (1728-1811).[5] He received his education in Karlsruhe, and at the .

Feodor Ivannoff's artistic talent was soon recognized at the Karlsruhe court and he was trained by court painters Joseph Melling and Philipp Jakob Becker. The focus of his training was on drawing and copperplate engraving. Supported by recommendations from his teachers, Feodor Ivannoff was then able to go on a study trip to Italy. He used the nine years from 1791, which he spent mostly in Rome, to study classical antiquity and the great painters and sculptors of the Italian Renaissance, particularly Lorenzo Ghiberti, Michelangelo and Raphael.[6]

Feodor Ivannoff created drawings and copperplate engravings from many ancient works. He was renowned for his precision and detailed reproduction.[7] In 1800 he traveled with five other artists, including the Italian painter Giovanni Battista Lusieri (1755–1821) and the Italian architectural draftsman (1768–1847), to Athens to work on behalf of Lord Elgin (1766–1841) to document the Acropolis and other ancient temples in pictures and to take plaster casts of figures and relief panels.[8] Lord Elgin then went a step further and between 1801 and 1803 had large parts of the sculptural jewelry, the frieze and the metopes of the Parthenon, the so-called Elgin Marbles, shipped to London, removing about half of the surviving sculptures of the Parthenon, as well as sculptures from the Propylaea and Erechtheum,[9] which earned him a lot of criticism during his lifetime.[10]

In 1803 Feodor Ivannoff also traveled to London, where he was supposed to etch around 100 drawings made in Athens. This did not happen, however, since Lord Elgin was held for several years in France as Napoleon's prisoner of war on his way home. Feodor Ivannoff left London in 1805 and returned to Karlsruhe via Paris in 1806, where he was appointed court painter by Elector Karl Friedrich.[5] As such, he was instrumental in the decoration of the : he created a cycle of images from the life of Jesus, which was completed after his death by Franz Joseph Zoll.[11]

Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmyk died in Karlsruhe in 1832, at the age of about 65.

He was mainly a draftsman and portrait artist. He painted less often in oil.[12] Influenced by the Zeitgeists and thanks to his long stay in Rome, he developed a preference for motifs from Greek and Roman antiquity as well as for religious themes from the Renaissance. Among other things, he created an eleven-part series of engravings from Lorenzo Ghiberti's bronze door to paradise at the Baptistery of Saint John in Florence.[13] His Descent from the Cross (Kreuzabnahme) based on an ivory relief attributed to Michelangelo is also considered a successful example of his artistic work.[5]

An illustrated book by Ivanoff with 12 copper engravings of the Florentine Gates of Paradise, published by the sculptor Heinrich Keller in Rome in 1798, was discussed in an episode of with Janin Ullmann. The episode was filmed in Reinbek Castle, and aired on February 5, 2017 on NDR.[14] [15]

Works (selection)

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmück. British Museum. 7 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210507231745/https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG27025. 7 May 2021.
  2. Karlsruhe: Badische Landesbibliothek, address books 1818–1832.
  3. General States Archives Karlsruhe, 206/1300–1305.
  4. Book: Ulrike Leuschner, Rainer Maaß . Quellen und Forschungen zur hessischen Geschichte 171 . Journal du voyage en Russie. Marianne von Löws Tagebuch der Russlandreise der Großen Landgräfin von Hessen-Darmstadt 1773 . Darmstadt/Marburg . 2015 . 978-3-88443-326-3 . 139.
  5. Book: Velte . Leben und Werk des badischen Hofmalers Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmück .
  6. Book: Heinrich Keller . Schottky, Julius Max . Römisches Tagebuch I . Kunsthaus Zürich, Grafische Sammlung, P–182 . 1835 . passim, especially page 122.
  7. Book: Tatter, Georg Ernst . Klatt, Norbert . Brief vom 22. Dezember 1792 an J. Fr. Blumenbach . Brosamen zur Blumenbachforschung . Göttingen . 2012 . 222.
  8. Brief vom 30. November 1799 des englischen Diplomaten William Richard Hamilton an Lord Elgin, in: Luciana Gallo: Lord Elgin and Ancient Greek Architecture. The Elgin Drawings at the British Museum, Cambridge/New York 2009, ISBN 978-0-521-88163-0, p. 84.
  9. Encyclopædia Britannica, Elgin Marbles, 2008, O.Ed.
  10. München, Allgemeine Zeitung vom 9. Mai 1803, S. 515. Siehe dazu A. H. Smith: Lord Elgin and his Collection. In: The Journal of Hellenic Studies 36, 1916, S. 163–372; William St. Clair: Lord Elgin and the Marbles. London/New York/Toronto 1967.
  11. Book: Velte . Leben und Werk des badischen Hofmalers Feodor Iwanowitsch Kalmück .
  12. "Er ist ein vortrefflicher Zeichner, seine Kompositionen in Crayon und mit der Feder sind charakteristisch und reich an Phantasie. Zu Ölgemälden nimmt er sich keine Zeit und Mühe." Meißner, Alfred: Norbert Norson. Leben und Lieben in Rom 1810–1811, Zürich 1883, S. 195
  13. Book: Schottky, Julius Max . Die Contouren der Ghibertischen Thueren zu Florenz . Echo. Zeitschrift für Literatur, Kunst und Leben in Italien . 1835.
  14. https://www.ndr.de/fernsehen/sendungen/lieb_und_teuer/Bildband-ueber-Florentiner-Paradiestuer,liebundteuer4518.html Video
  15. https://www.ndr.de/fernsehen/sendungen/lieb_und_teuer/Lieb-Teuer,sendung618518.html Informationen