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Only once in several generations does an artist come along whose work so
charms and titillates the human emotions as that of Nicolai Fechin. He
was born in 1881, in the little Tartar village of Kasan, Russia, on the
Volga, and grew up in the most difficult of times. A cholera epidemic
took his parents, and the peasants rose against an oppressive Czarist
government, yet through it all the young artist's genius emerged under
the school direction of the great Ilia Repin.
In 1923, Fechin, with his wife and daughter, immigrated to New York,
where he became an "overnight celebrity." The next year he started
winning art awards, including the coveted Proctor Prize at the National
Academy of Design.
But Fechin was restless, and his health was not good, which prompted him
to move first to the drier climate of Taos, New Mexico, and then to
California after an unfortunate divorce. For the next two decades he
painted mostly pueblo Indians, Mexican peasants, and Spanish descendants
of the sixteenth-century explorers who brought a new religion to
America. He had found his niche.
But this book is more about Fechin the human than about his genius at
the easel. It explores the depth of his personality, his loves, his
successes, and, of course, his failings. It also provides a showcase for
the photographs he made in Mexico in 1936 that so graphically portray
the innocence and character of the village people who lived in a time
when life was simple but hard. You will see that in their eyes.
These pages are full of words written in conversational language by a
man who knew the intimacies of Nicolai Fechin, as told by his wife and
friends. It is both a love story and a tragedy. You will see!
147 pages with
33 color plates and 68 of Fechin's black and white photographs from
travels in Mexico. Hardcover
Printed in the USA.
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