Exhibition "Preserved Russia" Automatic translate
с 17 Марта
по 12 АпреляГалерея искусств Зураба Церетели
ул. Пречистенка, 19
Москва
“The appeal to the old is not a rejection of the new, it is a new understanding of the old. This is not a developmental delay, just like a simple adherence to the old, but a leap forward… Human culture as a whole not only has a memory, but it is an active memory of mankind, actively introduced into the present. ”
Academician D. S. Likhachev
At the Museum and Exhibition Complex of the Russian Academy of Arts, the Zurab Tsereteli Gallery of Arts, on the initiative of the Moscow Metropolis of the Russian Orthodox Old Believers Church (ROCC), the exhibition "Russia Preserved", dedicated to the 400th anniversary of the holy martyr Protopope Habakkuk, opens. The celebration of this event is officially recognized at the state level by the instruction of the President of the Russian Federation, published in 2016. The exposition presents about 50 paintings dedicated to the history and modernity of the Old Believers in Russia.
All artists participating in the exhibition are representatives of ancient Old Believer clans or parishioners of the Russian Orthodox Old Believer Church. These are authors such as Academician of the Russian Academy of Arts, People’s Artist of Russia D. A. Belyukin, Academician of the Russian Academy of Arts, Honored Artist of Russia O. A. Leonov, Academician of the Russian Academy of Arts, Honored Artist of Russia E. V. Romashko, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Arts, Honored Artist of Russia D A. Slepushkin, artists D. Gusev, L. Milovanov, F. Moskvitin. The project was coordinated by the corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Arts, Honored Artist of Russia O. I. Molchanov.
Protopop Avvakum is the brightest and most influential ideologist of the Old Believers and the leader of “zealots of ancient piety,” who did not accept the patriarch Nikon’s church reforms in the 17th century. His dedication, loyalty to his convictions, courageous defense of his views in front of people in power, had a wide influence on his contemporaries and still inspire followers, heirs to the strict and ascetic culture of the Old Believers.
A number of exhibitors (O. Molchanov, D. Slepushkin, D. Gusev, L. Milovanov, F. Moskvitin) belong to the circle of artists of the Rogozh outpost, with XVII being the spiritual center and focus of life of the entire Moscow Old Believer. Currently, there is the metropolitanate of the Russian Orthodox Church (Russian Orthodox Old Believers Church). Inspired by the special way of life and the system of life, rituals and conditions that have been tremblingly preserved in the community for centuries in their original form, the painters tried to recreate the image of the Rogozh outpost as a “guardian of the old testaments”.
Artists continue the traditions of Russian realistic landscape painting and create a lyrical image of Russia, subtly conveying the poetry of their native nature. The canvases presented at the exhibition rightfully include the words of the writer V. Rasputin - “pure, kind, calm, quiet, conducive to reflection, to prayer, to understanding deep truths”.
The exhibition “Preserved Russia” allows the viewer to penetrate into the closed world of the Old Believer community, with its rich cultural tradition and spiritual history. Picturesque interiors of churches, captured scenes of worship, festive dresses of residents of the Old Believer community, fragments of home life and landscapes of holy places - all these plots, collected in a single exhibition space, make it possible to present the modern life of the Old Believers.
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