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词条 Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Posthumous recognition

  3. Musical works

  4. Paintings

  5. Gallery

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. Further reading

  9. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2013}}{{Infobox artist
| name = Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis
Mikołaj Konstanty Czurlanis
| image = Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis photo portrait.jpg
| birth_name = Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1875|9|22}}
| birth_place = Stare Orany, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1911|4|10|1875|9|22}}
| death_place = Marki, Warsaw Governorate, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
| nationality = Lithuanian
| field = Painting, musical composition
| training = {{plainlist|
  • Warsaw Conservatory
  • Leipzig Conservatory
  • Warsaw School of Fine Arts

}}
| movement = {{hlist | Symbolism | Art nouveau }}
| works = {{hlist | Spring Sonata | In the Forest }}
}}Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis ({{lang-pl|Mikołaj Konstanty Czurlanis}}; {{OldStyleDate|22 September|1875|10 September}} – {{OldStyleDate|10 April|1911|28 March}}) was a Lithuanian painter, composer and writer.[1]

Čiurlionis contributed to symbolism and art nouveau, and was representative of the fin de siècle epoch. He has been considered one of the pioneers of abstract art in Europe.[2] During his short life he composed about 400 pieces of music and created about 300 paintings, as well as many literary works and poems. The majority of his paintings are housed in the M. K. Čiurlionis National Art Museum in Kaunas, Lithuania. His works have had a profound influence on modern Lithuanian culture.

Biography

Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis was born in Senoji Varėna, a town in southeastern Lithuania that at the time was in the Russian Empire. He was the oldest of nine children of his father, Konstantinas, and his mother, Adelė née Radmanaitė (Radmann), who was descended from a Lutheran family of Bavarian origin. Like many educated Lithuanians of the time, Čiurlionis's family spoke Polish, and he began learning Lithuanian only after meeting his fiancée in 1907.[3] In 1878 his family moved to Druskininkai, 30 mi. (50 km) away, where his father went on to be the town organist.

Čiurlionis was a musical prodigy: he could play by ear at age three and could sight-read music freely by age seven. Three years out of primary school, he went to study at the musical school of Polish Prince Michał Ogiński in Plungė, where he learned to play several instruments, in particular the flute, from 1889 to 1893. Supported by Prince Ogiński's 'scholarship' Čiurlionis studied piano and composition at Warsaw Conservatory from 1894 to 1899.[3] For his graduation, in 1899, he wrote a cantata for mixed chorus and symphonic orchestra titled De Profundis, with the guidance of the composer Zygmunt Noskowski. Later he attended composition lectures at the Leipzig Conservatory from 1901 to 1902.

He returned to Warsaw in 1902 and studied drawing at the Warsaw School of Fine Arts from 1904 to 1906[3] and became a friend with Polish composer and painter Eugeniusz Morawski-Dąbrowa. After the 1905 Russian Revolution, which resulted in the loosening of cultural restrictions on the Empire's minorities, he began to identify himself as a Lithuanian.[4]

He was one of the initiators of, and a participant in, the First Exhibition of Lithuanian Art in 1907 at Vileišis Palace, Vilnius. Soon after this event the Lithuanian Union of Arts was founded, and Čiurlionis was one of its 19 founding members.

In 1907 he became acquainted with Sofija Kymantaitė (1886–1958), an art critic. Through this association Čiurlionis learned to speak better Lithuanian. Early in 1909 he married Sofija. At the end of that year he traveled to St. Petersburg, where he exhibited some of his paintings. On Christmas Eve Čiurlionis fell into a profound depression and at the beginning of 1910 was hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital "Czerwony Dwór" (Red Manor) in Marki, Poland, northeast of Warsaw. While a patient there he died of pneumonia in 1911 at 35 years of age. He was buried at the Rasos Cemetery in Vilnius. He never saw his daughter Danutė (1910–1995).

Čiurlionis felt that he was a synesthete; that is, he perceived colors and music simultaneously. Many of his paintings bear the names of musical pieces: sonatas, fugues, and preludes.

Posthumous recognition

In 1911 the first posthumous exhibition of Čiurlionis's art was held in Vilnius and Kaunas. During the same year an exhibition of his art was held in Moscow, and in 1912 his works were exhibited in St. Petersburg. In 1957 the Lithuanian community in Chicago opened the Čiurlionis Art Gallery, hosting collections of his works. In 1963 the Čiurlionis Memorial Museum was opened in Druskininkai, in the house where Čiurlionis and his family lived. This museum holds biographical documents as well as photographs and reproductions of the artist's works. The National M. K. Čiurlionis School of Art in Vilnius was named after him in 1965.[5]

Čiurlionis inspired the Lithuanian composer Osvaldas Balakauskas' work Sonata of the Mountains (1975), and every four years junior musical performers from Lithuania and neighbouring countries take part in the Čiurlionis Competition. Čiurlionis's name has been given to cliffs in Franz Josef Land, a peak in the Pamir Mountains, and to asteroid #2420, discovered by the Crimean astrophysicist Nikolai Chernykh.

Čiurlionis's works have been displayed at international exhibitions in Japan, Germany, Spain, and elsewhere. His paintings were featured at "Visual Music" fest, an homage to synesthesia that included the works of Wassily Kandinsky, James McNeill Whistler, and Paul Klee, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles in 2005.[6]

A commemorative plaque has been placed on the building of the former hospital in Marki, Poland where Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis died in 1911.

Čiurlionis's life was depicted in the 2012 film Letters to Sofija directed by Robert Mullan.

Musical works

The precise number of Čiurlionis musical compositions is not known – a substantial part of his manuscripts did not survive, while others, assumingly, perished in the fire during the war, or were lost. The ones available for us today include sketches, rough drafts, and fragments of his musical ideas. The nature of the archive determined the fact that Čiurlionis’ works were finally published only a hundred years after the composer’s death. Today, the archive amounts to almost 400 music compositions, the major part of which are works for piano, but also significant opuses for symphony orchestra (symphonic poems In the Forest and The Sea, overture, cantata for choir and orchestra), string quartet, works for various choirs (original compositions and Lithuanian folk song arrangements), as well as works for organ.

Some of his most-performed musical works include:

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
  • Nocturne in C sharp minor
  • Prelude in F sharp major
  • Nocturne in F minor
  • Impromptu in F sharp minor
  • String Quartet in C minor
  • Prelude in A major
  • Prelude in D flat major
  • Fugue in B minor
  • Prelude in B minor
  • Prelude in D minor
  • Karalaitės kelionė: Pasaka (The Princess's Journey: A Fairy Tale)
  • Seven fugues for organ (Fugue in G minor)
  • Folk songs for choir
  • De Profundis, for choir and orchestra
  • Miške (In the Forest), symphonic poem for orchestra (posthumous)
  • Jūra (The Sea), symphonic poem for orchestra (posthumous)
{{div col end}}

Paintings

The most popular{{citation needed|date=June 2018}} Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis paintings include:

{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
  • The Gift of Friendship (1906)
  • Cycle Winter (1906–1907)
  • Cycle The Zodiac (1907)
  • Sonatas (1907–1908)
  • Cycle Fairy-Tale (1909)
  • Creation of the World
  • Sonata of the Spring (1907)
  • Sonata of the Summer (1908)
  • Sonata of the Sun (1907)
  • Sonata of the Sea (1908)
  • Sonata of the Pyramids (1908)
  • Stellar Sonata (1908)
  • Sonata of the Serpent (1908)
  • Diptych Prelude and Fugue (1908)
  • Triptych Fantasy (1908)
  • Other Preludes and Fugues
    • Winter – Cycle of Eight Pictures (1906–7)
    • Spring – Four Pictures (1907–8)
    • Summer – Cycle of Three Pictures (1907–8)
{{div col end}}

Gallery

See also

  • List of things named after Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis
  • Rokas Zubovas

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://ciurlionis.eu/en/|title=Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis|publisher=Lithuanian National Čiurlionis Museum|accessdate=}}
2. ^{{cite book|title=M.K. Ciurlionis 1875–1911: pionnier de l'art abstrait: discours prononcé au 2ème Congrès International des Critiques d'Art, Maison de l'UNESCO, Paris, 1949|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rGS6ygAACAAJ|year=1950|publisher=A. Rannit}}
3. ^{{cite book |title=Encyklopedia muzyczna PWM: część biograficzna, Volume 2: cd |editor=Elżbieta Dziębowska |year=1984 |publisher=Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne |location=Kraków |isbn=83-224-0223-6 |pages=207–209}}
4. ^{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xSpEynLxJ1MC&pg=PA100|title=The reconstruction of nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999|author=Timothy Snyder|page=100|publisher=Yale University Press|year=2004|ISBN=978-0-300-10586-5}}
5. ^Istorija.html. M. K. Čiurlionis School Of Art
6. ^Visual Music, 13 February through 22 May 2005, MOCA Grand Avenue {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070710035704/http://www.stevebeck.tv/press/VMreleasefinal.pdf |date=10 July 2007 }}

Further reading

{{refbegin}}
  • Stasys Goštautas (editor), Čiurlionis: Painter and Composer, Vaga, Vilnius, 1994
{{refend}}

External links

{{Commons category|Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis}}
  • Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis: Life, Paintings, Music
  • Biography at the Lithuanian Music Information and Publishing Centre
  • {{IMSLP|id=Čiurlionis, Mikalojus Konstantinas}}
  • The complete Piano Music of Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis: Nikolaus Lahusen/Rokas Zubovas
  • {{allmusicguide|id=mikalojus-konstantinas-ciurlionis-mn0001178320}}
  • {{findagrave|3981}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Ciurlionis, Mikalojus Konstantinas}}

19 : 1875 births|1911 deaths|19th-century classical composers|20th-century classical composers|20th-century Lithuanian painters|Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw alumni|Art Nouveau painters|Deaths from pneumonia|Fryderyk Chopin University of Music alumni|Infectious disease deaths in Poland|Lithuanian classical composers|Male classical composers|People from Varėna District Municipality|People from Vilna Governorate|Pupils of Salomon Jadassohn|Romantic composers|Symbolist painters|20th-century male musicians|19th-century male musicians

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