Moscow spring Women in art Illustrations Romanov last ball Zhostovo painting Likes Polar nights Gatchina palace Narzan Baths
Spring in Moscow: What to like about Russia’s messiest season? Meanwhile in Russia: A sarcastic look at reality

On the other side of the canvas: Women in Russian art

RBTH highlights the amazing work of 10 female Russian artists.
By Ksenia Isaeva, RBTH
Women in art
Scroll down to see more

Maria Romanova

Maria Feodorovna Romanova was the second wife of Tsar Paul I (reigned between 1796 and 1801) of Russia. / Maria Feodorovna Romanova Flowers, 1787.
Women in art

Maria Bashkirtseva

A studio in Paris founded in 1868 and known as the Académie Julian was named after its founder, the artist Rodolphe Julian. Maria Bashkirtseva studied there and called Julian her “spiritual father.” / Maria Bashkirtseva, In a studio of Julien, 1881.
Women in art

Maria Shpak-Benua

Maria Shpak-Benua painted a self-portrait at 20 years old and died just a year later. In her lifetime she was famous for her sketches, watercolor panels and glass staining, and also was as a pianist, which gives an indication of the diversity of her talents. / Maria Shpak-Benua, Self-portrait, 1890.
Women in art

Antonina Rzhevskaya

A very famous and optimistic art piece. In a poor peasant house, an old man merrily dances together with his grandson to the sound of a harmonica. / Antonina Rzhevskaya, Merry Little minute, 1897.
Women in art

Zinaida Serebryakova

Self-portraits are a regular theme of Zinaida Serebryakova's paintings. Critics noted the clear, bright tones, and unparalleled natural beauty in her works. / Zinaida Serebryakova, By the dressing table. Self-portrait, 1909.
Women in art

Olga Della-Vos-Kardovskaya

Anna Akhmatova (pictured) was a charismatic poet. She was an icon of beauty, which many painters, including Modigliani and Olga Della-Vos-Kardovskaya, were compelled to portray. / Olga Della-Vos-Kardovskaya, Portrait of A. A. Akhmatova, 1914.
Women in art

Natalya Goncharova

Natalia Goncharova's avant-garde paintings are the most expensive of any female artist in history. / Self-portrait with Yellow Lilies, Natalia Goncharova, 1907.
Women in art

Aleksandra Exter

The city is one of the leading themes of Alexandra Exter’s paintings in the first half of the 1910s. It is difficult to classify these works as simple cityscapes as they are full of dynamic structures of geometric forms. / Aleksandra Exter, Florence, 1914-1915.
Women in art

Serafima Ryangina

Most of the artist’s compositions are dedicated to women’s life: the Soviet woman with her new role in life, in building, in industry, in war and in family is the main theme of Serafima Ryangina’s artwork. / Serafima Ryangina, Self-Portrait in daylight, 1924.
Women in art

Tatiana Yablonskaya

This picture shows beauty in the most ordinary and casual expression of everyday life, which explains Tatiana Yablonskaya’s attentiveness to the open air, color tone, airiness and shimmering light. / Tatiana Yablonskaya, The morning, 1954.
March 8, 2016
Tags: Art, culture_multimedia, women

Read more

+
Like us on Facebook