Cossacks escorting a convoy.

£15,000 · Offered by Shapero Rare Books

Rare example of early original drawing by one of Alexander Pushkin's favourite artists. Alexander Orlowski (1777 – 1832) was a Polish painter and lithographer. Of modest birth, his artistic talents grew from a very young age, and he was soon discovered by Izabela Czartoryska, a Polish aristocrat, art collector and writer who founded Poland's first museum in Krakow. Czartoryska financed Orlowski's artistic training with the French painter Jean Pierre Norblin, court artist to the Czartoryska family. At the age of 16, Orlowski decided to volunteer to fight in the Kościuszko insurrection. Wounded in battle, he returned to Warsaw, where Prince Józef Poniatowski financed the rest of his artistic studies. Orlowski lived in Poniatowski's Palace and was expected to make entertaining portraits and sketches of the prince's guests for their entertainment. In 1802 he moved to St. Petersburg. His drawings were well received at court, and in 1819, after a period travelling around Russia, Orlowski was awarded an official position in the Russian government painting military costumes. Orlowski continued sketching throughout his adventures. This drawing is an early example of the theme that was to bring Orlowski fame and recognition in the coming years. Although not imbued with the same confidence and boldness of touch as his later work, it already reveals the potential that made Pushkin remember the artist in his Путешествие в Арзрум [Journey to Arzrum]: 'У кибиток… пасутся уродливые, косматые

  • Binding: Hardcover

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