Lev Lvovich Kamenev (Russian: Лев Льво́вич Ка́менев; 1834, according to other information in 1833, Rylsk, Kursk Governorate – 26 January [O.S. 14 January] 1886 Savvinskaya sloboda, Moscow Governorate), was a Russian landscape painter.

Lev Kamenev
Born
Lev Lvovich Kamenev

1833 or 1834
Died26 January 1886 (aged 53)
Savvinskaya Sloboda, Moscow Governorate, Russian Empire
NationalityRussian
EducationKarl Rabus, Alexei Savrasov
Known forPainting

Biography edit

Kamenev was born in 1834. Soon afterwards, his father, a small trader, moved with the family to Astrakhan, where Lev studied at the local grammar school, but did not finish it because his father was in need of assistance, and took him to own shop. A passion for painting with Lev Kamenev saw the grandfather of Konstantin Korovin, who arranged for him to own an office and gave him five thousand rubles for admission to the Art school in St. Petersburg.[1]

In 1854, aged twenty-one years, he went to Moscow and entered the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture with the coming celebrities such as Ivan Shishkin and Vasily Perov, where he studied under the mentoring Karl Rabus, and after his death in 1857, under the mentoring Alexei Savrasov. In 1858 Kamenev was bestowed the title of the professional painter of the 3d degree and became a member of the Moscow Society of Amateurs of Arts, at the expense of it he departed for a two-year trip abroad for learning and mastery of Western European artists. Traveling to Germany and Switzerland, he carried out together with Ivan Shishkin.

The peak of Kamenev's career was in the 1860-70s, when his painting Winter Road became part of the Tretyakov collection. In 1869 for the painting Winter View from the Outskirts of Moscow and View from the Outskirts of Porechye he received the title of academician of the Academy of Arts landscape painting and became a member and one of the founders of The Association of Traveling Art Exhibitions (Peredvizhniki). Between 1871 and 1884, Kamenev took part at the exhibitions of the Association. In 1886 Kamenev died in poverty and solitude.

Works edit

References edit

  1. ^ Korovin, Konstantin (1971), "L.L. Kamenev and A. K. Savrasov", in Zilbershtein, Ilya; Samkov, Vladimir (eds.), Konstantin Korovin Remembers (in Russian), Moscow: Izobrazitelnoe iskusstvo, p. 141, OCLC 186039938