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Marc Chagall (1887–1985), born in Belarus to a Hassidic family, began
his education at a traditional Jewish school in Vitebsk. After studying
with a local artist for several years, the artist moved to St.
Petersberg in 1907 and continued his studies at the Zvantseva School.
Chagall moved to Paris in 1910 and his inventive imagery won immediate
recognition in the city's avant-garde circles. Here he began to
assimilate cubist characteristics into his expressionistic style. He is
considered a forerunner of surrealism. The artist returned to Belarus in
1915 where his support of the Bolshevik Revolution led to his
appointment as Commissar for the Arts in Vitebsk in 1918. During his
tenure, Chagall founded an art school and museum but, disillusioned with
the political environment of Russia, he returned to Paris in 1922, where
he spent most of his life.
Contemporary Surrealists revered Chagall’s dream-based imagery yet he
refused to join the movement, preferring to pursue his individualistic
path. Chagall maintained a consistent style throughout his long career.
His frequently repeated subject matter was drawn from Jewish life and
folklore; he was particularly fond of flower and animal symbols. The
artist translated his imaginative folkloric imagery to stained glass and
designed windows for cathedrals in Metz and Reims. Among his well-known
works are I and the Village (1911; Mus. of Modern Art, New York
City) and The Rabbi of Vitebsk (Art Inst., Chicago).
He designed the sets and costumes for Stravinsky's ballet Firebird
(1945). Chagall's twelve stained-glass windows, symbolizing the tribes
of Israel, were exhibited in Paris and New York City before being
installed (1962) in the Hadassah-Hebrew Univ. Medical Center synagogue
in Jerusalem. His two vast murals for New York's Metropolitan Opera
House, treating symbolically the sources and the triumph of music, were
installed in 1966. Much of Chagall's work is rendered with an
extraordinary formal inventiveness and a deceptive fairy-tale naïveté.
Chagall illustrated numerous books, including Gogol's Dead Souls,
La Fontaine's Fables, and Illustrations for the Bible
(1956).
A
prolific artist and dazzling colorist, Chagall's vast oeuvre of both
religious and secular subjects has gained worldwide recognition. A
museum of his work opened in Nice in 1973. His name is also spelled
Shagall.
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