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WelcomeAnatalio Sokoloff
Anatoly Àlexàndrovich Sokoloff (it was during his tong years in Argentinathat Anatoly became Anatolio, a Spanish version of the Russian original) was an artist of extraordinary talent and a most unusual fate. The best ofhis paintings depict epochal events and heroes spanning three continents and two centuries seen through the prism of his romantic vision of the world. At the same time, his own life was molded by the cataclysms and woes of 20th century to such an extent that his biography reads tike the history of our times. Anatoly Sokoloff was born in 1891 in Petrodvorets (Peterhof), into the family of a courtier in charge of the tsar's hunting. The Sokoloff’s, like many other courtiers, lived in Znamenka, the estate of Grand Duke Nicholas. The future artist's mother, nee Olshanskaya, grew up in a general's family along with her 12 brothers, all of whom served in the tsar's army. A military career had been a family tradition cherished through generations. Anatoly's father was no exception. Yet he saw nothing wrong with the fact that from the age of five his son had never parted with crayons, paints and paper. In fact, if a child displayed a penchant for beauty and art, it found a great deal of encouragement from the parents. One of Anatoly's two brothers was an accomplished musician, who played a number of instruments and sang, while the other liked to draw. Anatoly successfully graduated from the elite Nikolayevsky Cadet Corps and was enrolled in the TverCavalrySchool. Yet he continued to paint the world that surrounded him. Later, when Sokoloff became known for his battle pieces, viewers were always amazed at the mastery with which he executed mounted figures.
This is easily understood when one considers that Anatoly grew up in a family of traditional animal lovers, spent hours as a boy watching the graceful beauty of the tsar's retinue, and as a young cavalryman acquired first-hand knowledge of horses. While at the School, Anatoly continued to pursue his military studies and hone his artistic talent. His work started to attract the attention it was legitimately due and the young artist was granted permission from the highest quarters to attend the Academyof Arts. It so happened that the road to Saint Petersburg from Vyborg, where Sokoloff was quartered at the time, passed by Penaty, the estate of the great Russian painter Ilya Repin. Anatoly became a frequent guest there, along with virtually all the young artists from St. Petersburg. These visits left an indelible mark on Anatoly Sokoloffs work.
When in his early twenties, Sokoloff experienced the first of what would be many dramatic events. Though he had become a recognized figure in the capital's bohemian artistic circles, he remained, first and foremost, an tsarist officer.
The Bolshevik revolution found Anatoly Sokoloff in Finland; tragic events quickly followed:While in Vyborg, Anatoly learned about his father's brutal death. Alexander Sokoloff, who ad served the tsar all his life, was shot in his home at Peterhof. The artist's brothers, officers in the tsar's army, followed the call of duty to ii-hr the bolsheviks. One of them was killed at the outset of the civil war, while all traces of the other vanished. Anatoly quit the school to return to his bereaved mother and sister. During those hard times, painting became the only way to sustain his forlorn household and stay afloat in the tempest of class struggle. Then fortune seemed to smile upon the young artist: he enrolled in and graduated from the Academyof Arts, during which time he was tutored by the likes of Dmitry Kardovsky and Boris Kustodiev. His favorite mentor, though, was Alexander Savinov- an expert draftsman and skilled teacher. It is during those years that Sokoloff mastered the key principles of Russian classical painting at their best. His early exhibits met with wide acclaim, his paintings of that period stand out for their dynamism, emotional depth, vivid realism and profound spirituality.
In 1938, Anatoly Sokoloff was elected to a leadership position in the Crimean Artists' Unionof which he was one of the founders. The outbreak of World War II, found Sokoloff and his family still living in Simferopol. And once again fate delivers a devastating blow turning his most prized possessions into dust in a blink of an eye: during a Luftwaffe air-raid the building where all of Sokoloffs paintings hadbeen moved for safety precautions was obliterated. Not one painting was saved. The bombings were followed by occupation of the Crimea, and in 1942, fearing for his family and the deportation of his son to Germanyas a forced laborer, Anatoly decided, out of desperation, to escape to a neutral country. Disguised as a wounded Romanian soldier, hiding little Igor among his belongings, accompanied by his wife, dressed in a nurse's uniform, Anatoly managed to cross Russia reach Romania and continue their westward trek. Seven months later the family found itself in Switzerlands.
However, postwar Europe could not guarantee a safe haven for the artist and his family: Under Stalin's pressure, any Russian who had left the Soviet Union during the war could be deported with tacit agreement of European governments to Moscow, which in fact meant immediate arrest and a forced march to Siberia or the Arctic North - destinations which already were receiving trainloads of former Soviet POWs, Cossacks, and soldiers of the Vlasov army that had fought on Hitler's side. In 1950, the Sokoloffs emigrated to Argentina- the first country to have opened its doors to postwar Russian refugees. Not knowing the language or anybody at all in the new country, Anatoly Sokoloff, along with his wife and son, were sustained and driven only by his creative work. Profoundly homesick, it was during this period that the artist produced outstanding Russian landscapes. In what might be seen as an attempt to escape reality, the painter found refuge in the past, this time in the past of Argentina. He began seriously studying the history and literature of his adopted country. Soon, inspired by aheroic saga, Sokoloff embarked on a new project entitled "Liberator General San Martin Crosses the Andes" and dedicated it to General Jose San Martin (1778-1850), Argenrina's national hero who had headed the struggle fur independence against Spainand won a brilliant victory.
Thus, on his third attempt to start life anewAnatoly Sokoloff finally became famous. This time fate was kind - perhaps wishing to compensate for all the artist's sufferings: His name started appearing in the press - first in Latin Americaand then in the United States. One day Anatoly Sokoloff found a letter from Californiain his mailbox - a letter from his long-lost brother who had been reported missing in action during the civil war. In fact, he had retreated eastward together with the White Army, crossed all of Russia, reached Chinaand eventually ended up in San Francisco. Without further delay, Anatoly Sokoloff went to the United States, in 1962 he was joined by his wife,Alexandra, and his son, Igor. Finaliv things seemed to be looking up, the family was reunited - at last. But the past refused to let go: soon after having moved to California, Anatoly had to undergo open-heart surgery - which wiped out all of his savings. Were it not for his tremendous energy, talent and refusal to give up, Sokoloff could not have succeeded in turning a new leaf and beginning a new life, full of professional accomplishments and joy. During the last ten years of his life in the United States (he passed away in 1971), Sokoloff produced 19 monumental paintings, all of them stemming from spending long days in libraries where he studied the history of his new homeland. Of particular interest among the paintings of the period are "Lexington" (a small township in Massachusetts where the first skirmish between American colonists and British regulars took place on April 19,1775), "Gen. George Washington's Winter March" (a 1777 episode marked by extreme hardships for the Continental Army), " Emissaries of Lord Cornwallis at Gen. Washington's Headquarters" (on October 19, 1781, the British Army headed by General Cornwallis surrendered to General George Washington, bringing the US War of Independence to a victorious end). The artist, a consummate draftsman, a master of battle paintings vibrant, powerful and alive with the movement of rearing and plunging horses, marked by the vividly expressive figures and faces of both victors and vanquished, deserves to be put on a par with such famous Russian painters as Karl Bryullov and Nikolai Klodt. When studying American history, Sokoloff found subjects linking Americato his remote homeland. In 1962, he completed the painting "Russian Merchants at FortRoss", depicting trade between Indians and Russian colonists. FortRoss, the only Russian outpost in California, was founded in 1812. While studying the presence of Russians in Alaska, the artist stumbled upon the tragic saga of Conchita Arguello, the daughter of Don Jose Dario Arguello, commander of the Spanish fortress Presidio. She was sixteen when she met Nikolai Petrovich Rezanov, a prominent Russian statesman and explorer. Count Rezanov sailed into San FranciscoBayon the "Juno" and stopped at the Presidio to buy supplies for a Russian colony in Alaska. It was love at first sight for Conchita and Nikolai and they took vow, of eternal love.
Having accornplished his mission, Count Rezanov embarked on the return leg of his trip to Saint Petersburgwith the intent of rejoining Conchita in Californiaa few months later. However, on the overland trek to Russiahe took cold and died. Conchita waited for her beloved about 35 years. It was only in 1842 that she learned from an English seaman, visiting the Presidio, about Rezanov's death. Devastated by the news, Conchita took a vow of silence and became a nun. This story profoundly moved the artist and he painted several portraits of Conchita Arbuello. One of them, the favorite among his family members, was donated to the State Historical Museum of Moscow. The family made this decision upon learning that the museum had a portrait of Nikolai Rezanov among its exhibits. Thus, after almost two hundred years, these two loving hearts were reunited. In a wasy,the reunion marked the return of the artist himself, and, thanks to his family, the return of a part of Russia's history - so remote and yet so recent - immortalized in Anatoly Sokoloff’s art and carried through his life experience. N. Poroshina
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