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Józef Marszewski

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Józef Marszewski
Bornc. 1827
Died27 March 1883(1883-03-27) (aged 55–56)
NationalityPolish
Education
Known forLandscape painting
Movement

Józef Marszewski (Lithuanian: Juozapas Marševskis, Russian: Иосиф Иванович Маршевский; c. 1827 – 27 March 1883) was a Polish landscape painter. He was the grandfather of Zygmunt Marszewski [pl], a colonel of the Polish Army.

Biography

Early life

Józef Marszewski's birth date varies in sources. According to Marszewski's biographer Wojciech Gerson, Marszewski was born on 14 March 1827 in Vilnius (then part of the Russian Empire).[1] He was taught art by either Aleksander Kokular in Warsaw or by Wincenty Dmochowski[2] in Vilnius, or possibly by both of them.[3] From 1853 to 1856 he studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg under Maksim Vorobyov,[4] where he won two silver medals for his paintings View of the Neva During the March of Ice and Revel.[5] Alexey Bogolyubov notes that others (Alexey Chernyshev, Vasily Maksutov, Vladimir Sverchkov and himself) also worked on View of the Neva During the March of Ice painting for fun.[6] Marszewski graduated as an artist of the 14th class of the Academy. As a student, Marszewski was friends with Ivan Shishkin.[7]

Travels

Marszewski's painting of the ruins of the Trakai Island Castle (1866)
A "nocturnal" landscape by Marszewski (1864)

Continuing his studies, Marszewski began traveling across Europe visiting firstly Paris and Spain. In 1858 he lived in Dusseldorf where he continued improving his skills under Andreas Achenbach. Marszewski also visited Switzerland, Rome, Courland, and the Tatra mountains (in 1865 and 1866).[3] He traveled to Dusseldorf again in 1864, where he stayed until around 1870, after which he moved to Paris. Despite his travels, Marszewski retained contacts with his former Academy and in 1870 received the honorary title of "Class Artist", 1st Degree, for his painting View of Menton. Marszewski regularly submitted his works for exhibitions in Kraków, Lviv, and Warsaw.[3]

Later years and death

After returning from his travels, Marszewski usually lived in Warsaw (settled around 1872) and Vilnius, sometimes visiting modern-day Ukraine.[5] In 1873 Marszewski lost a large amount of money he had deposited in a bank and as a result fell into a deep depression, which eventually turned into a mental illness.[3]

Marszewski died on 27 March 1883 in Warsaw.[1] Other sources claim he died on 27 March 1874 in Vilnius.[4] He was buried in Vilnius, in what is now the old cemetery complex of Vilnius evangelicals.[8] He was remembered by his contemporaries as "a seasoned landscape painter full of energy [...] an excellent artist and a much-lamented colleague [...] full of life, with sparkling black eyes, of short height, dark-haired, with wide eyebrows, he was full of enthusiasm for art and he retained his love of work for it until the end."[3]

Works

Marszewski usually painted landscapes from the lands of Italy, Germany, Spain, Ukraine, Poland and Lithuania (especially around Vilnius). As was typical of landscape artists, Marszewski treated the landscape in an emotional way with which he tried to reflect the moods prevailing in nature. It is also known that Marszewski painted religious scenes and portraits. In 1847 he also painted Passage Through Berezina, a composition depicting the Battle of Berezina.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b "Juozapas Marševskis". lietuvosmenas.lt. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  2. ^ Dečkutė-Žukauskienė, Vilma. "Lietuvos dvarai menininkų kūriniuose (palyginkite kūrinius su nuotraukomis)". vilniausgalerija.lt. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Józef Marszewski". sztuka.agraart.pl. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Juozapas Marševskis (1827–1883)". tartle.lt. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Juozapas Marševskis". limis.lt. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  6. ^ Боголюбов, А. П. (1996). Записки моряка-художника. p. 36.
  7. ^ Шишкин, Иван Иванович (1984). Переписка. Дневник. Современники о художнике. p. 89.
  8. ^ "Vilniaus evangelikų senųjų kapinių komplekso senosios kapinės". kvr.kpd.lt. Retrieved 4 July 2024.