The battle paintings of Vasily Vereshchagin and Horace Vernet in the Context of Rhetorical Confrontation of Russian and French Imperial Ambitions
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article is devoted to some aspects of Vasily Vereshchagin’s reception in the context of Russian-
French artistic and diplomatic relations of the 19th century. Particular attention is paid to an incident,
which took place at the exhibition of Vereshchagin’s Turkestan series in St. Petersburg in 1874, when
General Kaufman among other officials condemned some of his battle paintings. The article is intended
to reconstruct the incident and give a new explanation for this negative reaction. Through the
comparative analysis of battle paintings of Vereshchagin and Horace Vernet and taking into account
the political confrontation between Russia and France in the 19th century, I suggest the following hypothesis.
The comparison of Vereshchagin with Vernet, which was widespread among their contemporaries,
played a special role at the exhibition in 1874. Thanks to a visitor to Vereshchagin’s exhibition,
a French ambassador Le Flô, this comparison became a form of ambiguous diplomatic statement
and reflected the opposition of French and Russian imperial ambitions. And it was one of the factors
that provoked the Russian officials to criticize Vereshchagin’s battle scenes. Refs 18.
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Chernysheva M. A. The battle paintings of Vasily Vereshchagin and Horace Vernet in the Context of Rhetorical Confrontation of Russian and French Imperial Ambitions. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Series 15. Arts, 2016, issue 3, pp. 60–69.