Portrait of Isaac Brodsky
1938
- Location in museum The Benois Wing, Room 81 Open the panorama of the hall in the virtual tour
- Period Early 20th century
- Portrait
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Brodsky, Isaac Israelevich (1883/1884-1939) - painter, graphic artist, theatrical designer, teacher, writer on art. Studied at the Odessa School of Art (1896-1902) and the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1902-08; under Ilya Repin from 1903). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1904).
Alexander Laktionov painted this portrait of Isaac Brodsky when his tutor was seriously ill. The artist writes in his memoirs that several other students painted portraits of Brodsky at the same time: “Each attempted to convey his features as faithfully as possible.” Laktionov assimilated his teacher’s painterly method, with its aspiration towards an exact and perfect image. The portrait is austere and the composition is exact; the face and hands are accentuated. The concrete painting, restrained tones and modelling of the form create a laconic and psychologically expressive image. Isaac Brodsky expressed his satisfaction with the portrait, adding with a hint of black humour: “Now I can die in peace.” Alexander Laktionov’s image was in fact the last ever portrait of the artist.