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Russian-born French painter
and designer, distinguished for his surrealistic inventiveness.
He is recognized as one of the most significant painters and
graphic artists of the 20th century. His work treats subjects
in a vein of humor and fantasy that draws deeply on the resources
of the unconscious. Chagall's personal and unique imagery
is often suffused with exquisite poetic inspiration.
Chagall was born July 7, 1887, in Vitsyebsk, Russia (now in
Belarus), and was educated in art in Saint Petersburg and,
from 1910, in Paris, where he remained until 1914. Between
1915 and 1917 he lived in Saint Petersburg; after the Russian
Revolution he was director of the Art Academy in Vitsyebsk
from 1918 to 1919 and was art director of the Moscow Jewish
State Theater from 1919 to 1922. Chagall painted several murals
in the theater lobby and executed the settings for numerous
productions. In 1923, he moved to France, where he spent the
rest of his life, except for a period of residence in the
United States from 1941 to 1948. He died in St. Paul de Vence,
France, on March 28, 1985. Chagall's distinctive use of color
and form is derived partly from Russian expressionism and
was influenced decisively by French cubism. Crystallizing
his style early, as in Candles in the Dark (1908, artist's
collection), he later developed subtle variations. His numerous
works represent characteristically vivid recollections of
Russian-Jewish village scenes, as in I and the Village (1911,
Museum of Modern Art, New York City), and incidents in his
private life, as in the print series Mein Leben (German for
"My Life,"1922), in addition to treatments of Jewish
subjects, of which The Praying Jew (1914, Art Institute of
Chicago) is one. His works combine recollection with folklore
and fantasy. Biblical themes characterize a series of etchings
executed between 1925 and 1939, illustrating the Old Testament,
and the 12 stained-glass windows in the Hadassah Hospital
of the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center in Jerusalem
(1962). In 1973 Musee National Message Biblique Marc Chagall
(National Museum of the Marc Chagall Biblical Message) was
opened in Nice, France, to house hundreds of his biblical
works. Chagall executed many prints illustrating literary
classics.
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