Noah's dejection from the Ararat mountain - 1870


Size (cm): 75x45
Price:
Sale price¥36,500 JPY

Description

Ivan Aivazovsky, master Russian of Armenian origin, whose unmatched skill in the representation of the sea and its moods has guaranteed a preemine symbolic of the biblical post-world. Made in 1870, this work is unmarked from its traditional maritime landscapes to confront ourselves with the monumentality of the mainland and the fragility of the human being against the divine will.

The composition of the work is undoubtedly remarkable. Noah, profiled against a majestic background of mountainous peaks and gloomy clouds, adopts a position that betrays its dejection. He is an hooded old man, alone, mired in an atmosphere of grief and reflection. Noah appears as a tiny figure compared to the vast landscape that surrounds him, thus highlighting the smallness of man in the face of the immensity of creation. The Ararat mountain rises behind him, almost like a silent witness of his desolation, his snowy peaks presenting a barrier that seems impassable.

The use of color in this paint is equally significant. Aivazovsky uses a cold tones palette to accentuate the bleak mood of the scene. The gray, blue and brown terrible dominate the canvas, conferring a dreary atmosphere that reinforces the sense of abandonment and despite Noah. The sky, loaded with clouds, suggests that the storm has passed, but the echo of its devastation persists in the air and the soul of the protagonist.

Ivan Aivazovsky was known for his ability to capture light and its effects on different elements, and although this work is not about the sea, it demonstrates a similar domain in the representation of the light reflected on snow and rocks, contrary to the trend of their maritime landscapes illuminated by sunlight or the moon. Here, each mountain reef, each projected shadow is shown with realism, contributing to a palpable isolation atmosphere.

Noah's treatment is also worthy of mention. Aivazovsky builds a portrait that goes beyond the literal, hinting at a deep emotional and spiritual burden. Noah, with his simple clothing and his hidden face, becomes a symbol of humanity facing the consequence of his own acts and the unavoidable divine will. It is an incarnation of melancholy and the gloomy acceptance of fate, but also of resilience and reconnection with the new reality imposed by the flood.

It is interesting to observe how this work, thematically related to a biblical narrative, is linked to the historical and artistic context of the nineteenth century. At that time, there was a resurgence of interest in the sublime and the spiritual in art, and Aivazovsky, through Noah and Mount Ararat, seems to dialogue with these contemporary concerns about the role of man in the universe.

"Noah's dejection from the Ararat mountain" is a work that reveals a different facet of Aivazovsky's talent, temporarily moving away from the hug of the sea to explore the depth and mystery of the earth and the human soul. It is a visual meditation on the human condition, reconciliation with nature and the inexorable passage of time, inviting us, to each spectator, to reflect on our own position and vulnerability in the vast tapestry of the cosmos.

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