
CHAGALL
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(1887 - 1985)
Chagall was born in Vitebsk, Russia. He apprenticed
under the portrait painter Pen before traveling to St. Petersburg in 1907
to study first at the Imperial School of Fine Arts and then with theatrical
designer Leon Bakst. From 1910 until 1914 Chagall worked in Paris, combining
a respect for cubism with his travels into the realms of fantasy and memory.
His subjects floated on the canvas, unbound by the laws of gravity. Chagall
became Commissar of Fine Arts in Vitebsk in 1917 and founded an academy.
He later resigned and became involved in theatrical art in Moscow (including
creating murals for the Yiddish theater). Returning to Paris in the 1920s,
he made almost two hundred etchings as illustrations for two books. These
were not published until 1949 and 1952. At the invitation of the Museum
of Modern Art in New York, Chagall came to America in 1941. Up to that
time his work contained many images of village life in Russia, but it
began to reflect the suffering of his people during World War II. In the
ensuing years he continued to paint religious subjects. Chagall returned
to France in 1948.
"Bay of Angels"
"L'Opera"
"The Magic Flute"
"Exodus"


