Julius von Klever

Winter Landscape in Spring

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Material: Oil on canvas
Dimension: 75 x 138 cm
Frame: Yes 
Dated: 1908 
Certificate: Yes
Shipping: Worldwide

All Paintings at Davidjan Art Gallery are original and unique works.

Description

Julius von Klever (1850 Dorpat — 1924 Leningrad)

Winter Landscape in Spring

Material: Oil on canvas
Dimension: 75 x 138 cm
Frame: Yes 
Dated: 1908 

About the Artist:

Julius von Klever was a Baltic German Russian landscape painter from the 19th Century. His father was a chemist who taught pharmacology at the Veterinary Institute. He displayed artistic talent at an early age and took lessons from Konstantin von Kügelgen. After completing his primary education, was enrolled at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts where, at his father’s insistence, he studied architecture. After a short time, however, he began to take landscape painting classes; first with Sokrat Vorobiev, then Mikhail Clodt.

In 1870, he was apparently expelled from the Academy, for unknown reasons. Undeterred, he started exhibiting his works. In 1871, one was purchased by Count Pavel Stroganov and, the following year, his painting. “Sunset”, was acquired by Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna. In 1874, he had his first solo exhibition at the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. After Tsar Alexander II expressed interest in his work, he was named an “Artist” by the Academy, despite having not graduated. In 1878, he became an “Academician”. In 1879, he and the actor Vasily Samoylov spent some time working on Nargen island. The resulting works were purchased by Pavel Tretyakov and the Imperial Family, including Tsar Alexander III. Following this, the Academy named him a Professor. In 1885, he helped organize the Russian exhibit at the Exposition Universelle d’Anvers. During this time, he was overwhelmed with orders and often completed a painting in a single day. He sometimes employed assistants to do the underpainting. Their identities and the extent of their contributions has not been fully established.

After the Revolution, he began receiving support from the “Society of Artists”. For the rest of his life, he taught at the Academy (under its successive new Soviet names) and at the Art and Industry Academy, where he headed the department of “monumental” painting. Three of his four children became painters; Maria (1878-1967) a theater artist, Julius (1882-1942) who taught at the Art and Industry Academy, and Oscar (1887-1975) a theater artist who also designed costumes.

Works in Museums

Von Klever’s works are in the State Russian Museum, State Tretyakov Gallery, Odesa Fine Arts Museum, museums in Zaraisk, Barnaul, Vladimir, Volgograd, Kaluga, Kozmodemyansk, Kostroma, Krasnodar, Lipetsk, Veliky Novgorod, Sevastopol, Semey, Serpukhov, Stavropol, Syktyvkar, Tambov, Ulyanovsk, Almaty, Yerevan, Voronezh; in private collections.