Mark Zakharovich Shagal
(1887-1985)
By Alexander Boguslawski
Mark
Zakharovich Shagal, known today all over the world as Marc Chagall, was born
on July 7, 1887, in Vitebsk, Belorussia. He was the oldest of nine brothers.
His father worked in a salt herring factory, his mother took care of the
household, and the grandfather taught the boy religion, instilling in him love
for religion and the knowledge of the Torah. In 1906, Chagall left the Jewish
elementary school he attended and began studying at Yehuda Pen's school of
painting in Vitebsk. In the winter of the same year, Chagall decided to move
to St Petersburg, hoping that his art would find approval there. However, he
failed his first art examination. Putting his pride aside, in 1907 Chagall
applied to and was accepted to the school of the Society for the Encouragement
of the Arts in St. Petersburg, directed by Nikolai Roerich. Dissatisfied with
the school, he transferred to Zeidenberg's private art school and later to
Zvantseva's School, where he studied with Mstislav Dobuzhinskii and Lev Bakst.
In 1910 he moved to Paris and found a place in the famous "La Ruche" (Beehive)
in the Vaugirard district, where he met the poets Blaise Cendrars and Guillame
Appolinaire, and the painters Chaim Soutine, Fernand Leger, and Robert
Delaunay. Chagall always stressed the importance of Paris for his development:
"In Paris, it seems to me, I have found everything, but above all, the art of
craftsmanship. I owe all that I have achieved to Paris, to France, whose
nature, men, the very air, were the true school of my life and art." Chagall's
exposure to
Cubism resulted in his attempts to incorporate the Cubist multiple points
of view and geometrical shapes into his compositions, as can be seen in two of
his best
known early paintings, Me and My Village (1911) and Self-Portrait
with Seven Fingers (1912-13).
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AND EVE EXPELLED FROM PARADISEqqqq
Two
years later, Chagall contributed to the Salon des Independants and Salon d'
automne as well as to Larionov's Donkey's Tail exhibition in Moscow. In
1913 participated in the Target exhibition and in 1914 had his first
one-man show at the Galerie der Sturm in Berlin. The same year Chagall
returned to Russia and went to Vitebsk, where he married Bella Rosenberg who
would become an inspiration for many of his works. From Vitebsk, the married
couple moved to St. Petersburg (at that time Petrograd). Chagall contributed
to the Exhibition of Painting, 1915, and a year later sent over forty
paintings to the Jack of Diamonds show in Moscow. After the Revolution
Chagall was active as an art educator. He moved back to Vitebsk and in 1919
became a founder, director, and the most popular teacher at the Vitebsk
Academy. However, because he wanted the school to express all points of view
on art, he was ousted by the Malevich fraction ( SUPREMATISTS) and left
Vitebsk for Moscow.
In
Moscow, Chagall collaborated with the Kamernyi State Jewish Theater and with
the Habimah Theatre. He left Russia in 1922 and after a year in Berlin,
settled in Paris in 1923. In 1924 he had the first major retrospective at
the Galerie Barbazanges-Hoderbart. In the mid twenties produced
illustrations to La Fontaine's Fables. Visited Palestine (1931),
Holland (1932) Spain (1934-5), Poland (1935), and Italy (1937); in 1941 had
to leave Germany and seek shelter in the United States. The death of Bella
stopped Chagall's creativity for many months. After his return to France in
1948, the artist decided to move to the south of France and in 1950 he
settled in Saint-Paul-de-Vence. Two years later, he married Valentine ("Vava")
Brodskii.

His new wife was
an important factor in Chagall’s recovery as a painter. She encouraged him to
undertake large entenar projects, for instance the cycle Biblical Message.
Finished in 1966 and installed seven years later in the National Museum of the
Marc Chagall Biblical Message in Nice, the paintings (see a selection below)
astonish with their vivid colors and their poetic interpretations of the
Biblical texts. Among the largest projects was the decoration of the ceiling
of the Paris Opera (1964), and the murals for the Metropolitan Opera in New
York (1965). He also explored the technique of stained-glass, designing
windows for the Cathedral in Metz (1959-62), for the Hadassah Hebrew
University Medical Center in Jerusalem (1960-1), for the Cathedral at Reims
(1974), and for Saint Etienne Church at Mayence (1978-81). In the West,
Chagall had countless exhibitions and retrospectives. In Russia, after many
years of silence and disregard for the artist, an exhibition of Chagall’s
works from private collections was organized in Novgorod in 1968, and five
years later Chagall was invited to visit Moscow in connection with a small
retrospective of his work. Finally, on the entenary of the artist’s birth a
large exhibition opened at Pushkin Museum in Moscow, and a Chagall
Museum was opened in Vitebsk.
Chagall
occupies a unique place in world art. Even though at times he was slighly
influenced by the contemporary developments in arts ( when he discovered
Cubism for example), throughout his long life he was an independent artist,
often criticized for his lack of "realism" or for his lack of desire to
explore non-objective art. The sources of his inspiration are found in his
childhood, in the life of a provincial city of Vitebsk and its Jewish
community, the Scriptures, and, more surprisingly, Russian folk art and icon
painting. He was a poet, and his artistic visions can be considered "poetry in
colors and shapes." He populated his pictures with angels, lovers, flying
cows, fiddlers, circus performers, and roosters, creating lyrical poems which
proclaimed the beauty of all creation, as well as his unwavering belief in the
existence of miracles and in the infinite wisdom of the Creator. Despite some
dark moments in his personal life, he remained an optimist, and with every
brushstroke, every green, blue, or purple face of his violinists, every kiss
and every embrace of his lovers, every little house or church of Vitebsk,
every image of the Eiffel Tower, his paintings seem to sing the "Ode to Joy."
[S.H. and A.B.]