- Source: Mikhail Erassi
Mikhail Spiridonovich Erassi (Russian: Михаил Спиридонович Эрасси; 2 December [O.S. 20 November] 1823 — 10 January 1899 [O.S. 29 December 1898]) was a Russian painter of Greek descent, commonly known for his landscapes, typical of Academic style. A relative of the Romantic painter Alexey Venetsianov, Erassi was among the last students of his painting school before gaining a reputation as follower of the Swiss painter Alexandre Calame.
Biography
Mikhail Erassi was born in 1828. He studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts under Professor Vorobyov. During his studies, he was awarded several prizes.
In 1853, as a pensioner of the Academy of Arts, he was sent abroad for two years, but in 1856 he applied for a postponement of his stay abroad for another two years to continue his studies under the guidance of the famous artist Alexander Calame. For his part, Kalama also asked to leave Erassi to improve his skills.
In 1857 Michail Erassi was elevated to the rank of academician and in 1862 he was elected professor of landscape painting. Erassi was strongly influenced by Kalam and had almost perfectly assimilated the techniques of the latter. His subjects were often Swiss landscapes. Three views sent by him from Switzerland to St.-Petersburg gave him the title of academician and the views of Four Forest Canton, Lake Geneva and Reichenbach Falls made him a professor at the academy.
The Emperor Alexander III Museum (now the State Russian Museum) acquired the following paintings by Erassi: "The shore of Lake Leman near Chambery", "Switzerland", "View near Vyborg, in Finland" and "Winter Landscape".
Mikhail Erassi died in Prussia in the 1880s.
Gallery
References
Further reading
Presnova, Natalya G. (October 2007). "'Лучший из учеников Калама'". Антиквариат (in Russian). No. 51. pp. 56–67. ISSN 1683-7665, republished as stand-alone artbook in 2010.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
Milner, John (1993). A Dictionary of Russian and Soviet Artists, 1420–1970. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors' Club. p. 133. ISBN 1-85149-182-1. OCLC 29787870.
External links
Mikhail Erassi at the Russian Academy of Arts' official website (in Russian)