Ciurlionis

Jan. 22nd, 2005 06:51 pm
avrelia: (high seas by awmp)
[personal profile] avrelia
You probably don’t know, but a while back I wrote a story of my one true love – the one that is not going to end happily, and I am glad that it isn’t. Here it is if you are curious.

This is another story about my personal relationship with an artist. It lacks the intensity of the first one, but it warms me as a good friendship. Of course, the artist in question is long dead, but when was it the obstacle for being friends? He is also not very well known outside of Lithuania and former USSR republics, which is a pity.

Avrelia presents Ciurlionis, a Lithuanian artist and composer, who lights up my mood, even when he doesn’t plan to.


Mikalojus Konstantinas Ciurlionis [chu:rlyonis] was born on September 22 (new style), 1875, in Varena, Lithuania, in what was then the Kaunas province of the Russian Empire. In 1878 the family moved to Druskininkai, a resort town in the Gardinas province.

If you are interested in a detailed biography you can see it here, because I prefer not to repost, but to tell about my personal relationship with him.

Saying that I had a personal relationship with an artist who lived a century ago invite a reasonable question about my sanity. So, I have to elaborate that I didn’t see him or talked to him in any form. Yet, I still consider my connection to his art, my love of it, my thoughts and feelings raised by it to be my personal relationship with an artist.

Here is how it happened. In the august 1991 I was on a school trip to Lithuania – then still a part of USSR, but not for long. I felt in this kind of affection with Lithuania as whole – for its beautiful hills and forests, for its strange history, and for something in the air and culture that I cannot describe, but find immensely attractive. Neither Latvia, nor Estonia hasn’t left such an impression on me.


One day we were in Druskininkai – a resort town, the birthplace of Ciurlionis. We visited his house, preserved and turned into a museum; we listened to his music; we walked around a lot. But I rarely can connect this much through music, and I don’t remember anything about it. I loved the surrounding forest – it was bright and cheerful, and I saw a real hare hopping around – all reasons enough to love the place. The artist? Not really.

The next day, however, we went to Kaunas – the second-largest Lithuanian city after Vilnius, the capital. And in Kaunas we visited the museum of Ciurlionis art – where most of his artwork is on display. Then and there I’ve become enchanted.

You won’t have another opportunity to see his artwork unless you visit this museum: Ciurlionis created his works in pastel, which gave them an ethereal quality of something between dream and reality and made them physically too fragile to move anywhere. There are reproductions – of the superior quality that are moved from exhibition to exhibition. I had an opportunity to see both, and, the originals are better. ;)
One of the most important qualities of Ciurlionis art is that his pastels are musical, and his music is… but I don’t really know. This is the link to some fragments on-line: listen and tell me.

I am here to present the visual art, which is the one I love.


The Truth - Moths and the flickering candlelight.


Stillness (one of my favourites) Is it a sleeping giant or a hill looking into the sea?


The Forest



He liked to create cycles of work – united by the same theme, developing it in a different way. Being a musician, he created sonatas. So, I look at them, love them, and feel that I am half-blind, because I don't get the musical part of it. Still, they wake up something that ties up my impressions of Lithuania, and of the world, and dreams and fairytales all together. They can be read so many times in so many different ways.

Sonata of the Sun. Allegro.


Sonata of the Sun. Andante.


Sonata of the Sun. Scherzo.


Sonata of the Sun. Finale.




Sonata of the Sea. Allegro.


Sonata of the Sea. Andante.


Sonata of the Sea. Finale. You can see the letters “M” and “K” of his given name written on the tide, ready to disappear.



you can see more here and here.
I am choosing the easy way and let him speak for himself. Enjoy!

Date: 2005-01-22 07:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] st_salieri.livejournal.com
Oh, these are gorgeous. I love Stillness and the Sonata grouping. I wish I could get prints of some of these.

I've always wanted to visit Lithuania. I have relations there, so maybe one of these days I'll get to go.

Date: 2005-01-23 07:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] avrelia.livejournal.com
I wish I could get prints of some of these.

Probably you can find some in the Internet.

I've always wanted to visit Lithuania. I have relations there, so maybe one of these days I'll get to go.

Really? That's so cool! And Lithuania is very beautiful, you sould definitely go there there is resorts and castles, and deep rural areas, and amazing cities, and forsests, and stuff. ;)

Profile

avrelia: (Default)
avrelia

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    123
456 78910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 12th, 2026 04:12 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios