Our perception of Chagall, perhaps the most singular of 20th-century painters, is made clearer by this original study which renews understanding of an untrammelled art, a primordial outpouring of painting.Illustrated by works in hitherto unpublished Russian collections, this approach shows how painting for this rebel artist is first and foremost, a personal adventure, a flight of the imagination.
This is a unique celebration of the early life of the greatest Russian-born painter of the twentieth century. It is the ultimateproof, if more were needed, that Chagall drew the inspiration for his dream-like,deceptively primitivist work,almost exclusively from his Russian homeland. The scenes of everyday Jewish life in Russia were mostly reproduced from memory, long after the artist had left his native town of Vitebsk, first for the heady,intellectual atmosphere of St.Petersburg, and later for the bohemian Paris of the 1920s.
The book is divided into four sections, covering the chronology of Chagall"s 98-year life.his childhood, and youth, with glimpses into the future, after he had left Russia in 1923.There is much contemporary documentary evidence in the shape of photographs of Vitebsk.Chagall"s hometown, his family, and himself as a young man.and much revealing and fascinating detail of his background.The paintings and prints show scenes from the daily life in the shtetl, the Jewish village or Jewish quarter of a small town which existed in pre-war Eastern Europe.
The Land of my Heart
The Early Years
Graphic Works
Chronology
Index of Works Reproduced
Notes