Mikhail Nesterov (May 31 [O.S. May 19] 1862, Ufa –
18 October 1942, Moscow) was a major representative of
religious Symbolism in Russian art. He
was a pupil of Pavel Tchistyakov at the Imperial Academy of
Arts, but later allied himself with the group of artists known as
the Peredvizhniki. His canvas The Vision of the Youth Bartholomew (1890–91),
depicting the conversion of medieval Russian saint Sergii Radonezhsky, is
often considered to be the earliest example of the Russian Symbolist style.
From 1890 to 1910,
Nesterov lived in Kiev and St Petersburg, working
on frescoes in St. Vladimir's Cathedral and the Church
on Spilt Blood, respectively. After 1910, he spent the remainder of his life
in Moscow, working in the Marfo-Mariinsky Convent. As a
devout Orthodox Christian, he did not accept the Bolshevik
Revolution but remained in Russia until his death, painting the portraits
of Ivan Ilyin, Ivan Pavlov, Ksenia Derzhinskaia, Otto Schmidt,
and Vera Mukhina, among others.
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