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VASSILI VASSILIEVICH VERESHCHAGIN (18...

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 1021 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VASSILI VASSILIEVICH

VERESHCHAGIN (1842-1904)  ,
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Russian artist and traveller, was born at Tcherepovets, in the government of Novgorod, on the 26th of
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October 1842 . His
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father was a Russian landowner of noble birth, and from his
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mother he inherited Tatar
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blood . When he was eight years old he was sent to Tsarskoe Selo to enter the Alexander cadet corps, and three years later he entered the
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naval school at St
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Petersburg, making his first voyage in 1858 . He graduated first in the list from the naval school, but
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left the service immediately to begin the study of
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drawing in earnest . He won a medal two years later, in 1863, from the St Petersburg Academy for his " Ulysses slaying the Suitors." In 1864 he proceeded to Paris, where he studied under Ger6me, though he dissented widely from his master's methods . In the
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Salon of 1866 he exhibited a drawing of "
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Doukhobors chanting their Psalms," and in the next
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year he accompanied General Kauffmann's expedition to Turkestan, his military service at the siege of
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Samarkand procuring for him the
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cross of St George . He was an indefatigable traveller--in Turkestan in 1869, the Himalayas, India and Tibet in 1873, and again in India in 1884 . After a period of hard
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work in Paris and Munich he exhibited some of his Turkestan pictures in St Petersburg in 1894, among them two which were afterwards suppressed on the representations of Russian soldiers— " The Apotheosis of War," a
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pyramid of skulls dedicated " to all conquerors, past,
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present and to come," and " Left Behind," the picture of a dying soldier deserted by his fellows . Vereshchagin was with the Russian army during the
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Turkish
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campaign of 1877; he was present at the
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crossing of the Shipka Pass and at the siege of Plevna, where his
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brother was killed; and he was dangerously wounded during the preparations for the crossing of the Danube near Rustchuk . At the conclusion of the war he acted as secretary to General Skobelev at
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San Stefano . After the war he settled at Munich, where he produced his war pictures so rapidly that he was freely accused of employing assistants . The sensational subjects of his pictures, and their didactic aim —the promotion of peace by a representation of the horrors of war—attracted a large section of the public not usually interested in
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art to the series of exhibitions of his pictures in Paris in 1881 and subsequently in
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London, Berlin,
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Dresden, Vienna and other cities .

He aroused much controversy by his series of three-pictures of a

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Roman execution (the Crucifixion), of sepoys blown from the guns in India, and of the execution of Nihilists in St Petersburg . A journey in
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Syria and
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Palestine in 1884 furnished him with an equally discussed set of subjects from the New Testament . The " 1812 " series on
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Napoleon's Russian campaign, on which he also wrcte a
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book, seem to have been inspired by Tolstoi's War and Peace, and were painted in 1893 at Moscow, where the artist eventuallysettled . Vereshchagin was in the Far East during the Chino-
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Japanese War, with the
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American troops in the Philippines, and with the Russian troops in
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Manchuria . He perished in the sinking of the Russian
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flagship, "
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Petropavlovsk," on the 13th of
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April 1904 . His last work, a picture of a council of war presided over by
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Admiral Makaroff, was recovered almost uninjured . See E . Zabel, " Wereschtschagin " (1900), in Knackfuss's Kunstlermonographien (
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Bielefeld and
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Leipzig) . The finest collection of his pictures is in the Tretiakov gallery in Moscow .

End of Article: VASSILI VASSILIEVICH VERESHCHAGIN (1842-1904)
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