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2019 | 1 | 37-46

Article title

Dream and Reality in the Life of Nicholas Lochoff: on the History of the Creation of Nicholas Lochoff’s Pittsburgh Cloister

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article recounts the unusual fate of the artist-copyist Nicholas Lochoff. Lochoff, who lived most of his life abroad, in Italy, remains relatively unknown in his Russian homeland. Based on Russian and American historiography, and the periodical press, the author follows Lochoff ’s path from professional revolutionary to self-taught artist who became recognized as one of the leading copyists of the twentieth century. As research shows, the philanthropy of Helen Clay Frick enabled the University of Pittsburgh to acquire Lochoff ’s unclaimed copies of European masterpieces where they became an asset in educating future generations of American art historians.

Year

Volume

1

Pages

37-46

Physical description

Dates

published
2019-06-30

Contributors

  • Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburg

References

  • TsGA SPb F. 14. Op. 3. D. 30023, Tsentral’nyy Gosudarstvennyy Istoričeskij Arkhiv Sankt-Peterburga. Fond 14 (Imperatorskiy Petrogradskiy universitet. 1819–1918 gg.). Opis’ 3. Delo 30023 (Lokhov Nikolay Nikolayevich. Lichnoye delo studenta). [Центральный государственный исторический архив Санкт-Петербурга. Фонд 14 (Императорский Петроградский университет. 1819–1918 гг.). Опись 3. Дело 30023 (Лохов Николай Николаевич. Личное дело студента).]
  • Akinsha, K./Kozlov, G. (1995), Beautiful Loot: The Soviet plunger of European’s art treasures. New York.
  • Berenson, M. L. (1930), A reconstruction of old masterpiecies. In: The American Magazin of Art. XXI/11, 628–638.
  • Fifield, B. (1996), Seeing Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh.
  • Flint, K. (1980), Art and the fascist regime in Italy. In: Oxford Art Journal. III/2, 49–54.
  • Hovey, W. R. (1967), Nicholas Lochoff cloister of the Henry Clay Frick fine arts building. Pittsburgh.
  • Kirkland, K. (2003), Schenley fountain, Frick fine arts building honors wealthy namesakes. In: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 20.
  • Lenin, V. I. (1975), Polnoye Sobraniye Sochineniy. Moskva. XXXXVI/612. [Ленин, В. И. (1975), Полное собрание сочинений. Москва. XXXXVI/612.]
  • Pitz, M. (2003), Rare Murals Being Restored in Pitt Fine Arts Building. In: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. May 25.
  • Sanger, M. F. S. (2007), Hellen Glay Frick: bittersweet heiress. Pittsburgh.
  • Sanger, M. F. S. (2011), Henry Clay Frick houses: architecture, interiors, and landscapes in the golden era. New York.
  • Semenova, N./Iljine N. (ed.) (2013), Selling Russia’s treasures: The Soviet trade in nationalized art, 1917–1938. New York/London.
  • Veresova, T. V./Ralalay, M. G (2017), Chelovek Renessansa: khudozhnik Nikolay Lоkhov. Moskva. [Вересова, Т. В./Талалай, М. Г. (2017), Человек Ренессанса: художник Николай Лохов. Москва.]

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

ISSN
2081-1128

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-93713fe9-f9db-4255-8163-a8536a9e8f2b
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