Canvas, Oil. (400 x 800)
This work’s greatness has nothing to do
with its size, but rather with the monumental
nature of the artist’s vision. On the canvas
is portrayed the deadly clashing of two
forces embodying the age-old battle of Good
against Evil. The action takes place during
the early 1920’s. An international band
has broken into an Orthodox church where
members of all the classes of pre-revolutionary
Russia are gathered. In the center of the
composition is a commissar in a leather
cap. In one hand he holds a mauser, and
in the other, a dog on a leash with the
cross of St. George around its neck. His
hate-filled gaze is directed at the image
of the crucifixion of Christ in the right
side of the painting. In the savageness
of the commissar’s image one can sense how
he anticipates the achievement of his longed-for
goal: to wipe out Orthodox religion. Rallying
behind him is an assortment of rabble: a
sailor with a rifle and machine gun, weapons
of mass executions; a person letting a pig
with a church cross out of a sack; a promiscuous
woman with a general’s greatcoat thrown
over her naked body; a woman in an ermine
coat, acquired in the spirit of “Steal what’s
been stolen!”; a “revolutionary family”
wearing wedding crowns upon which pentagrams
have been pinned…. It is known that during
the “great French revolution” a naked prostitute
was enthroned upon a church altar. And it
is also common knowledge that mercenaries
became the striking force of the revolution
– Chinese, Latvians and others who were
known for their especial cruelty in their
dealings with the native population. The
painting shows a Chinese woman in an officer’s
peaked cap.
A bloodthirsty dark throng astride charging
horses (recalling the horses of the apocalypse)
falls upon those who have come to celebrate
the Resurrection of the Savior, the holiest
of Orthodox observances. A priest extends
his arms in a gesture of anger -- “Be gone!”
One need only look into the faces of those
surrounding him to get a sense of the Russia
which was crucified, with its clergymen
and “God’s Fools,” the nobility, the army
and the merchants, along with simple ploughmen
and all those who embodied a state built
upon the principles of orthodoxy, autocracy,
and the common people.
The women’s faces have a remarkable expressiveness,
and bear the imprint of the tragic nature
of the events transpiring. Each image is
very unique, yet at the same time evokes
familiar associations with other famous
images.
The recognizable familiarity of the time
and its characteristic features comes from
the artist’s profound penetration into the
historical fabric of the epoch. The painting’s
atmosphere and its images are based upon
the rare wealth of historical and artistic
materials gathered by the artist over the
course of his life. Among them are rare
volumes published both in Russia and abroad,
such as a three-volume album of portraits
of the Russian aristocracy, published in
Spain in 1987, and miraculously preserved
birth records. The artist also utilized
personal sketches from models completed
during his student years and images of real
people who survived the revolutionary upheaval
and the ensuing “great changes.”
Naturally, biographical motifs also appear
in the painting. Those who are familiar
with Glazunov’s book “Russia Crucified”
will recognize the artist’s parents in the
officer with a candle and the woman standing
next to him, and his grandfather in the
image of the government official in the
left corner of the picture.
The tragic events transpiring in the church
take place against the background of evangelistic
subjects painted on the walls of the defiled
place of worship. In the painting the earthly
goes hand and hand with the heavenly, and
this association forces us to think more
deeply about these events, comparing the
past with our present times, and contemplating
the future.