The Battle of SINOP on November 18, 1853, night after the battle


Size (cm): 75x50
Price:
Sale price35.400 ISK

Description

Ivan Aivazovsky, one of the most eminent marine painters of the nineteenth century, achieves with his work "The Battle of SINOP on November 18, 1853, night after battle" (The Battle of SINOP ON 18th November 1853, Night after Battle) An impressive conjunction of historical drama and technical mastery. Painted in 1853, this work highlights a crucial war episode of the conflict between the Ottoman fleet and the Russian Navy during the Crimea War.

The composition of painting is a torrent of immortalized emotions on the canvas. Aivazovsky displays the scenario as a post-apocalyptic scenario, where the raging sea mixes with the fuel remains of the boats. The battle is over, but the sequelae of the confrontation still wrap the environment. In the foreground, fragments of flame ships rise against darkness, contrasting movedly with the merciless waves that look like ghostly danube sweeping the rubble.

The use of color in this paint is masterful. Aivazovsky resorts to a contrasting game of lights and shadows to transmit the intensity of the scene. The orange glow of the fires faces the bluish black of the night, giving a focal point that guides the viewer's gaze through the visual narrative. The stormy color is not accidental; Add an almost tactical sense to chaos and emphasize the consequences of devastation.

Human characters are almost absent, which is not uncommon in the marine works of Aivazovsky. His approach here seems to be more in the immensity and fury of the sea and less in the individual. However, the involvement of human presence is felt through the shattered remains of war ships. It is a silent but palpable testimony of the act of combat, with the figures of human scope implicit in the tragedy that the debris narrate.

One of the most prominent aspects of this work is Aivazovsky's ability to capture the dynamism of water and fire with equal intensity. The waves seem almost moving, wrapping everything on their way. It is this fluid movement that makes the night after the battle so evocative. The sea, constantly, reflects both desolation and resilience, characteristics inherent to the war set.

Aivazovsky demonstrates in this work his domain of romanticism, but with a particular inclination towards the sublime. It is not simply a representation of a historical event, but an authentic exploration of the emotions that these moments house these moments. The painting, through its drama and accuracy, manages to transport the observer to the bleak night of November 18, 1853, allowing to participate in the sepulchral stillness that follows the conflict.

This piece is inserted into the broader corpus of Aivazovsky's work, where the sea with its multiple quiet, violent, unbeatable facets is the undisputed protagonist. In the context of his other works, "the battle of SINOP" stands out for its emphasis on post-conflict status, a recurring theme that Aivazovsky handles with particular sensitivity. Here we do not celebrate a victory, but we are witnessing the deep and disturbing war reverberations.

In conclusion, Ivan Aivazovsky gets once again to capture the essence of the sea as a theater of the sublime and the terrible, showing that in each wave and glow of fire there is a story to tell. "The battle of SINOP" is a work that continues to resonate, not only as a historical representation, but as a reflection on the humanitarian and natural consequences of war.

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