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Gerasimov, Sergey (Vasilyevich)
(b Mozhaysk, 26 Sept 1885; d Moscow, 20 April 1964). Russian painter. He trained in Moscow, at the Stroganov Institute (19017) and the School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (190712), under Sergey Ivanov and Konstantin Korovin. His early Post-Impressionist sensitivity for the modelling of form through colour was embodied in expressive portraits of social types (e.g. Front-line Soldier, 1926; Moscow, Tretyakov Gal.). The austere, almost monochrome Oath of the Siberian Partisans (1933; St Petersburg, Rus. Mus.) contrasts with the optimistic, broadly impressionistic Collective Farm Holiday (1937; Moscow, Tretyakov Gal.), while the experiences of the war years are expressed in the heroic, emotional Partisans Mother (194350; Moscow, Tretyakov Gal.). Gerasimovs work represents a compromise between Socialist Realist tendentiousness and the quick sensitivity of a painting style full of lyrical sincerity. The latter emerged with particular clarity in the poetic and reflective Mozhaysk Landscapes (1954; Moscow, Tretyakov Gal. and elsewhere). The artists painting style is also used in his book illustrations, such as those for Maksim Gorkys Delo Artamonovykh (The Artamonov case, 193954; Moscow, Tretyakov Gal. and other collections). Gerasimov also proved an experienced teacher. He taught at the Surikov Institute of Art in Moscow (193650) and at the Moscow Artistic-Industrial High School (195064). He was an able and sensitive administrator, holding the position of first secretary of the Board of the Union of Artists of the USSR in the years of thaw between 1958 and 1964, and won a reputation as a genuine liberal.
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