Читаем В пучине бренного мира. Японское искусство и его коллекционер Сергей Китаев полностью

It is important to stress here that, despite all the love that Kitaev felt toward ukiyo-e prints (these confessions are lavishly scattered throughout his letters), his most serious interest was painting. In a very engaging way he describes scrolls and screens that he bought or could not buy because of price or availability. Kitaev wrote that painting represents Japanese art best of all and called exhibitions of his collection “exhibitions of painting.” In this respect, he resembles the first American nineteenth-century connoisseurs of Japanese art, Henry Bowie (1848–1921) and Ernest Fenollosa (1853–1908), who, while admiring Japanese classical art, were rather lukewarm about prints. (Fenollosa later changed his mind, possibly because of the art market and job opportunities.) Kitaev mentioned Fenollosa and his collection in two letters.

Sergei Kitaev’s dream “Encyclopedia” never became the scholarly catalogue nor his collection the touchstone for future connoisseurs that he envisioned.

Exhibitions

In a letter written in December 1916 to Vasily V. Gorshanov, a member of the Society of Friends of the Rumyantsev Museum, Kitaev gives a short appraisal of his collection:

Since the time [I formed my collection], a whole series of books on Japanese art has been published. I have them now, and thus I can more clearly understand the colossal material I collected. Besides that, I canvassed all Europe, excluding only Spain, Portugal and the Balkan Peninsula, studying museum and private collections. In 1910, in London, I saw the exhibition “The Treasures of Old Art of Japan” (I have its illustrated catalogue), which was temporarily brought from Japan by the special order of the Mikado on the occasion of the Japan-British Exhibition[220]. It occurred only once in the whole of Japanese history, and the reason was to show it to the British king, the nobility, the members of the British-Japanese Society, and also Franco-Japanese Society, specially invited from Paris. It was not shown to the general public. I saw it as a member of the Franco-Japanese Society, in the club’s building, methodically, part by part, during three days, and this was a lucky opportunity to compare my kakemono [hanging scrolls] with those exhibited there. Based on the aforementioned, I was convinced that my collection occupies the second place in Europe, both in quality and quantity. The first would remain forever the collection of the engraver Chiossone, who bequeathed it to the Academy of Arts in Genoa[221].

Kitaev visited the largest museums in Berlin, Hamburg, Paris, London and elsewhere, meeting with their curators. “Hokusai,” Kitaev observes in a letter to Pavlinov, “is represented more fully [in my collection] than even in Chiossone’s. He reiterates this claim in several other places in the letter: “Hokusai is just an amazing spontaneous force. You will see this when you look on those thousands that I have… This edition [of Manga] is in fifteen books; I have it in the most rare excellent first printing. Likewise, I have the famous One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji in three volumes in the first edition[222].” In the Brief List, he gives the following numbers: Hokusai color prints – 3 large and 337 medium size; black-and-white – 1666 large and 394 medium. Besides those he adds 80 large and exactly 1000 medium-sized color prints in late editions.

In October 1896, Kitaev proposed an exhibition of his collection to the vice-president of the Imperial Academy of Arts:

Your Excellency,

Having spent almost three and a half years in Japan, I collected about two hundred fifty Japanese paintings, several hundred sketches and drawings and several thousand color prints. Among artists, there are representatives of all schools of Japanese painting; thus, the exhibition of their works can give an idea of Japanese art[223].

Striving to enlighten the public, Kitaev organized three exhibitions of his collection: December 1 – 25 (December 13 – January 6), 1896, in the Imperial Academy of Arts (Saint Petersburg); February 1 – 23 (February 13 – March 7), 1897, in the Historical Museum (Moscow); and in late September – October 1905, in the Society for the Promotion of the Arts (Saint Petersburg). Kitaev compiled booklets, or guides, to accompany the exhibitions in 1896 and 1905[224].


E-8

List of Hokusai hanging scrolls from Kitaev’s guide to the exhibition of Japanese painting in St. Petersburg

1905. Private Collection, Moscow.


Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Дворцовые перевороты
Дворцовые перевороты

Людей во все времена привлекали жгучие тайны и загадочные истории, да и наши современники, как известно, отдают предпочтение детективам и триллерам. Данное издание "Дворцовые перевороты" может удовлетворить не только любителей истории, но и людей, отдающих предпочтение вышеупомянутым жанрам, так как оно повествует о самых загадочных происшествиях из прошлого, которые повлияли на ход истории и судьбы целых народов и государств. Так, несомненный интерес у читателя вызовет история убийства императора Павла I, в которой есть все: и загадочные предсказания, и заговор в его ближайшем окружении и даже семье, и неожиданный отказ Павла от сопротивления. Расскажет книга и о самой одиозной фигуре в истории Англии – короле Ричарде III, который, вероятно, стал жертвой "черного пиара", существовавшего уже в средневековье. А также не оставит без внимания загадочный Восток: читатель узнает немало интересного из истории Поднебесной империи, как именовали свое государство китайцы.

Мария Павловна Згурская

Культурология / История / Образование и наука