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Maria Raevskaia-Ivanova

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Maria Raevskaia-Ivanova
Раєвська-Іванова Марія Дмитрівна
Self-portrait (1866)
Born1840
DiedOctober 1912
Known forPainter, art teacher, first woman in the Russian Empire awarded the title of "Free Artist"
Rural Landscape (date unknown)

Maria Dmitriyvna Raevska-Ivanova (Ukrainian: Марія Дмитрівна Раєвська-Іванова; 1840, near Gavrilovka, Izyumsky Uyezd, Kharkov Governorate – October 1912, in Kharkov) was a Ukrainian painter and art teacher. In 1868 she became the first woman in the Russian Empire to be awarded the title of "Free Artist" by the Imperial Academy of Arts.[1]

Biography

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She was born to a family of landowners and was educated at home. Then, she studied abroad for five years in France, Italy and Dresden, attending courses in ethnology, archaeology, art history and linguistics in addition to her regular art classes.[1]

When she returned in 1868, she passed the exam for "Free Artist" at the Imperial Academy and, the following year, settled in Kharkov, where she opened a private drawing and painting school[2][3][4] that provided free room and board for the poor. In 1872, Mariya Ivanova Rajevska received the title of Honorary Member of the Academy for the innovative methods she applied in her private studio, which won her pupils prizes at exhibitions.[5] The school she founded was in operation for twenty-seven years and taught approximately 900 students, including Serhii Vasylkivsky, Alexei Beketov and Konstantin Pervukhin.[1][3] At the All-Russia Exhibition of Drawing Schools, it bested the much more prestigious Stroganov School.

In 1896, it became a public facility, operated by the city.[4] Then, in 1912, it became the "Kharkov Art College"; a satellite school of the Imperial Academy, under the direction of Alexander Lubimov.[3][6] During the Soviet Era it was a technical school and is now known as the "Kharkiv State Academy of Design and Arts".

In addition to her painting and teaching, she was the author of numerous articles and pamphlets on art instruction,[1] as well as a textbook, "The ABCs of Drawing for the Family and the School" (1879).

Her husband, Sergei Alexandrovich [ru], was also a teacher and served on the Kharkov City Council. Her son, Alexander Sergeyevich [ru], was a technical engineer who helped design several familiar types of Russian locomotives.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Brief biography from "Famous People from Barvinkove" Archived 2015-07-16 at the Wayback Machine @ The Village Library.
  2. ^ Natalia, Budanova (2019). Women Artists to Victims of War – The First Exhibition of the Moscow Union of Women Painters and its Reception by the Contemporary Press. ARTL@S BULLETIN, Vol. 8, Issue 1 Spring 2019. p. 112.
  3. ^ a b c "Kharkiv State Academy of Design and Fine Arts". ksada.org. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  4. ^ a b Lozhkina, Alisa (2020). PERMANENT REVOLUTION - ART IN UKRAINE, THE 20th TO THE EARLY 21st CENTURY. ArtHuss. p. 55.
  5. ^ LEITE, Tamires Moura Gonçalves (2019). As estampas de Liubov Popova e Varvara Stepanova e o novo modo de vida soviético. UNIVIERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO ESCOLA DE ARTES, CIÊNCIAS E HUMANIDADES. p. 26.
  6. ^ Davidich, T.F. The significance and stylistic features of eclectic objects in the city of Kharkov. Technical Transactions, Vol. 4/2019. pp. 5–22.
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