Ivan Lubennikov

Ivan Leonidovich Lubennikov is a Russian painter, born in 1951 in Minsk. He lives and works in Moscow.

Early life and education

He spends his childhood in Siberia whose memory, especially hunting and fishing, spreads through his pictorial and literary artworks. He moves to Moscow at 14 years old and enters a few years later the Surikov Art Institute in Moscow in the monumental art department.

Career

Graduated in 1976, he mainly dedicates himself to the realization of big mural fresco until the beginning of the 1990s. He first stands out in 1982 with a mural painting for the public room of the Tryokhgorka manufacture, awarded with the prize of the Union of the Artists of Moscow, first of his numerous monumental artworks: decoration of the façade and interior of the new train station of Zvenigorod (first prize of the Foundation of the Artists of Moscow), memorial monument for the Russian section of the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum with the architect Alexandr Skolan in 1985, intervention with laminated iron on the old facades of the Taganka Theatre in Moscow in 1987. Most of his realizations have been destroyed during the last years of the Soviet regime, on the contrary of one of his emblematic artwork: the design of the State Museum Vladimir Mayakovsky in 1991.[1]

Ivan Lubennikov begins to show his paintings in the first years of the 1980s but it is first important solo exhibition in a Muscovite gallery in 1987 which brings him recognition. The majority of these exhibited paintings are now part of Russian regional museums’ collections. The end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s correspond to the peak of interest from foreign collectors in Russian art; during this period his paintings were acquired by great German collectors, such as Henri Nannen or Peter Ludwig who now owns around twenty of his artworks.[2]

The economic problems of the New Russia put a stop to his architectural works. From the early 1990s, it is a 15-year period entirely devoted to painting and characterized by the use of black background. Profoundly Russian, his painting switches between ironic detachment and hedonism, popular culture and artistic references. He recognizes the influence of Paul Delvaux and has many times declared his admiration for Matisse, Caravaggio, Zurbarán and the art of icons in their way of constructing space.[3] With a high sense of composition and an approach intentionally aestheticized, Lubennikov continually reinvents his main subjects: nudes, still lifes, Siberian landscapes.

Professor at the Monumental art department of the Surikov Art Institute in Moscow since 1994, he was chosen to realize with his students in 2005 the decoration of three Muscovite metro stations:[4] Mayakovskaya in 2005 (awarded with the international prize Vladimir Mayakovsky in 2009 and the gold medal of the Russian Academy of Arts), Sretensky Bulvar in 2007 and Slavyansky Bulvar in 2008. Each station was designed in different materials: stained glass, mosaics, cast iron, etched steel. In 2009, he creates a 40m² artwork made with 20 glass-stained panels for the Madeleine (Paris Metro).[5] Named Chicken Ryaba, this monumental work tells the story of Russia through its symbols. This public commission was offered by the city of Moscow to the RATP Group as a thank to the donation of an ensemble by Hector Guimard to the Muscovite metro station Kiyevskaya.[6]

In October 2011, a monograph in two volumes was published for his retrospective exhibition[7] at the Central House of Artists in Moscow to celebrate his sixtieth birthday.[8] The first volume reproduces more than two-hundred paintings and a dozen of architectural works. The second volume is a collection of literary text by the painter. A second book of his texts has been published in 2013 by Free Artists Editions in St-Petersburg.

Academician[9] of the Russian Academy of Arts, and named People’s Artist, he was honoured with the Order of Friendship in October 2011.

Solo exhibitions (selection)

Collective exbibitions (selection)

Public and private collections (selection)

Bibliography (selection)

External links

References

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