Zlatoust master Ivan Bushuev's interpretation of constructive ornamental elements of decorated cold steel arms

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The authors examine the decorative elements of the artwork of Ivan Bushuev (1798-1835), the famous engraver for metal. It is the saber of an arbitrary sample in the sheath that was presented to the Emperor Alexander the First while visiting the factory for the manufacture of cold decorated steel arms in Zlatoust in 1824. The researchers based on the stylistic element-structural method studied the decor of the blade and sheath. As a result they came to the conclusion that Bushuev when creating his interpretations of constructive ornamental elements (griffin, palmetta, volute, etc.), followed in the mainstream of historical development of their artistic transformation. The outstanding master perceived the achievements of antiquity, Roman Empire and renaissance heritage not directly, but through following the empire style. Based on this style samples he applied creative principle that the authors have identified as a stylistic decorative-element variation. The next level of his work is defined as a stylistic composition-structural one. The highest level of the master's creativity is named as symbolic and semantic one. It provides an opportunity to open in his artwork such meanings as Russian identity, the historical time of Alexander the First ruling, glorification of the emperor's victories and deeds. The master-engraver embodied the basic patriotic ideas of the Russian empire art style through images of creative work and sublime glorification of Russia.

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Decoration and applied art, russian cold steel decorated arms, zlatoust metal engraving, empire style, author's creativity, ivan bushuev, emperor alexander the first

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147151195

IDR: 147151195   |   DOI: 10.14529/ssh170312

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