Forum famous child artists. The most unusual facts from the life of great artists

Famous artists of our time, who did not have enough brushes and colors to express their genius, delight and shock not only with their works, but also with the way they created them.

Paints, pencils, brushes and a canvas - that's probably all you need to create a stunning piece of art. Oh yes, more talent! These artists have it, no doubt. After all, they did not even need ordinary materials to write unique masterpieces. Take a look at what can happen if a genius undertakes to draw.

1. Jet art by Tarinan von Anhalt

Florida princess Tarinan von Anhalt does not use brushes for her paintings. They are created with the help of ... aircraft. How does she do it? In fact, the artist simply tosses bottles of paint, and the jet thrust of the aircraft engine “creates” a unique drawing on the canvas. Did you have to think of this? But jet art is not her idea. The princess “borrowed” the jet art technique from her husband Jürgen von Anhalt. Creating such pictures is not so easy, and sometimes even life-threatening: air currents reach tremendous speeds and strengths, they can be compared with a hurricane, and the temperature of such a “hurricane” can exceed 250 degrees Celsius. The risk, combined with creativity, allows the princess to receive about $ 50,000 for one of her creations.



2. Ani Kay and artistic torment


A copy of the canvas of the great Leonardo da Vinci "The Last Supper" Indian artist Ani Kay wrote in his own language. In this case, the most common colors were used. As a result of many years of creativity, Anya poisons her body all the time, experiencing symptoms of intoxication: headaches, nausea and weakness. But the stubborn Indian is ready to accept torment for the sake of art again and again.



3. Bloody paintings by Vinicius Quesada

Vinicius Quesada is a scandalous Brazilian artist, whose paintings are literally given to him with his own blood and ... urine. The tricolor masterpieces of the Brazilian are worth a lot for himself: every 60 days, 450 milliliters of Vinicius's blood goes to write paintings that shock and shock the public.


4 Menstrual Artwork by Lani Beloso


And again, blood. The Hawaiian artist also does not accept colors. Her paintings are created by her menstrual blood. No matter how strange it may sound, but the works of Lani are really feminine, what can I say. And it all started out of desperation. Once a young girl suffering from menorrhagia, having decided to find out how much blood she actually loses during pathologically heavy periods, began to draw a picture from her own secretions. For a whole year, during each menstruation, she did the same, thus creating a cycle of 13 paintings.


5. Ben Wilson and chewy masterpieces


The artist Ben Wilson from London decided not to use either ordinary paints, nor canvas and began to create his paintings from chewing gum, which he finds on the streets of London. Cute creations of the "master of gum" adorn the gray asphalt of the city, and in Ben's portfolio there is a photo of his unusual paintings.



6. Finger Art by Judith Brown


This artist just has fun creating such unusual paintings with tiny bits of coal and her fingers, she doesn't even consider her work to be art. But fingers instead of brushes and charcoal instead of paint - so unusual and, you see, beautiful. Just as beautiful is the name of Judith's series of paintings - Diamond Dust.



7. Self-taught artist Paolo Troilo


The master of monochrome also draws with his fingers, applying acrylic paints. Once a successful Italian businessman, Paolo Troilo was named Italy's Best Creative Artist of 2007. Without a single brush, he paints such realistic paintings that sometimes you can’t distinguish them from black and white photographs.


8. Automotive masterpieces by Jan Cook


No wonder they say that in every genius lives Small child. A young painter from the UK, Jan Cook, is a vivid confirmation of this. He paints pictures, as if playing with cars on the controls. 40 colorful canvases depicting cars are created using paints, but instead of brushes in the hands of the artist, they are remote-controlled toys on wheels.



9. Tom's Otman and Delicious Art


Such pictures just want to take and lick. After all, they were painted not with paints, but with real ice cream. The creator of such “delicious” painting is Otman Toma from Baghdad. Inspired by the delicacy, the artist photographs his finished works along with “paints”: orange, berry chocolate.



10. Elisabetta Rogai - the sophistication of aged wine


Tasty colors for her creations are also used by the Italian artist Elisabetta Rogai. In her arsenal - white, red wine and canvas. What comes out of it? Incredible paintings that change their shades over time, just like an old aged wine changes its aroma and taste. Live works!



11. Spotted Paintings by Hong Yi

What could be worse for an exemplary hostess than coffee cup marks on a white tablecloth? But, apparently, the Shanghai artist Hong Yi is not an exemplary hostess. Creating her paintings, she now and then leaves such spots on the canvas. And not because she likes to drink coffee while she works, but because in this way, without using any brushes or paints, she draws.



12. Coffee painting and beer art by Karen Eland


Artist Karen Eland also tried to paint using coffee instead of paint. And she did it pretty well. Reproductions of the most famous works made with coffee liquid look like real paintings. The only difference is the brown shades and Karen's signature coffee cup on each work.

Subsequently experimenting with liquor, beer and tea (no, she did not drink them), Eland concluded that beer paintings come out best for her. A bottle of intoxicating drink for one canvas replaces the artist's watercolors.


13. Kisses from Natalie Irish


One must love art so much that, without ceasing to create, every now and then kiss your work! This is exactly how Natalie Irish feels. Great love - there is no other way to call her paintings, painted not with brushes and paints, but with lips and lipstick. Several dozen shades of lipstick, several hundred kisses - and such masterpieces are obtained.

14. Kira Ein Varzeji - chest instead of hands


American Kira Ein Varzeji also invested a lot of love in art - her magical paintings are painted with her breasts. It is hard to even imagine how many colors the artist poured onto her chest. But not in vain!



15. Sex Art by Tim Patch


He takes canvas, paints, but no brushes. And what do you think the Australian artist paints his canvases with? Yes, the very place, which he is not at all shy about. Tim's manhood is what you need. At least the pictures painted with the penis are wonderful. I must say that the artist uses not only the main male genital organ, but also the “fifth point” as a drawing tool. With her help, Tim draws up the background of the picture. The master himself does not take his work seriously, and even his pseudonym is not serious - Pricasso. Imitating outrageous genius Picasso, the artist shocks exhibition visitors not only with his paintings, but also with the visualization of the process of their creation.



There is a page in art that is not customary to talk about. From murdering jewelers to patricide, from sex with teenage girls to acquiring stolen goods, art history is rife with crime and misdemeanor. It will be about famous artists- criminals.

I'll start with Caravaggio. It is simply impossible to make a TOP without starting with Michelangelo Merisi, called Caravaggio.
He was a Master, super-master, he was a genius. He painted in a harsh, downright cinematic realism, looking at his canvases, the viewer finds himself on the streets of Rome at the beginning of the 17th century.


And in these meager, impoverished streets, Caravaggio was a dangerous man. Aggressive and angry, without parting with the sword, he constantly got into trouble - hitting a waiter, slandering rivals. In the end, which was inevitable, he killed a man in a fight in the square and was forced to flee to Rome. While traveling, he painted works that seem to be full of guilt, including his self-portrait with the severed head of Goliath. Look into his eyes: there is despair and guilt in them. They have the tragedy of murder.

But Caravaggio's reputation as a criminal may not be so dire. In any case, he was not what is now called a recidivist.)) Street fighting was not uncommon at that time, and the repentance that he created is the creation of a great artist.

2. Benvenuto Cellini

But this is not Benvenuto Cellini, who in the 16th century killed repeatedly without remorse and without punishment.

He stabbed his brother's killer. He also killed a jeweler's rival and recounted these crimes in his autobiography. He fled, of course, fearing retribution, but society's admiration for his talent protected him. In those days, geniuses really could get away from a crime scene.

3. Banksy

Graffiti is, by definition, against the law, and Banksy in the UK has had a brilliant career in places that are not allowed at all. Part of his success is his phenomenal ability to avoid arrest and his famous anonymity. His works, once washed away, painted over by angry police officers and workers, are now regarded as precious treasures to be preserved for posterity.

4. Egon Schiele

In 1912, this dangerously erotic Austrian artist was arrested for allegedly having sex with a teenage girl. And the real motive for the arrest was the horror of a small bourgeois town, which saw the work of the maestro, where the models reclined in their underwear.

5. Picasso

Theft of the century - The Mona Lisa is stolen from the Louvre, and Picasso is on trial. He and Apollinaire are suspected of involvement, since in 1907 Picasso, through Apollinaire, acquired from an adventurer two Iberian figurines stolen from the Louvre. Frightened by the prospect of prison and expulsion from the country (and they both do not have French citizenship).


Friends return the figurines through the newspaper, go through the arrest of Apollinaire and the interrogation of Picasso, but, in the end, the suspicion of involvement in the theft of the Mona Lisa is removed from them, and they are released with censure. Picasso, however, still suffers from a little paranoia for some time - he imagines that police agents are constantly watching him.

6. Fra Filippo Lippi

The Carmelite monk and Renaissance genius Filippo Lippi seduced the young nun Lucrezia Buti. They had a son and a daughter. In the 15th century, all of Florence was shocked by this outrageous behavior of an artist who violated church laws. But everything is not so simple. Lippi was the favorite painter of Cosimo de' Medici, the most powerful man in the city, and as a result he was never prosecuted. His illegitimate son Filippino grew up to be a great painter.

7 Olive Wharry

This early 20th-century British artist was sent to prison after she set fire to and burned down a teahouse in Kew Gardens. Wharry was a suffragette and is remembered more for her criminal behavior than for her art. Her delicate watercolors create an amazing contrast with her deeds: arson and hunger strikes - this is a lot in the artist's asset.


8 Shepard Fae

America's most famous contemporary Steet artist and creator of the "Hope" poster that helped get Obama elected. Fairey performed it in 2008, during the Obama campaign.


The poster not only glorified its creator, but also influenced the mood of voters. The motives of "Hope" were used in the creation of political posters and after the elections. That's all well and good, but Fae had run-ins with the police, she refused to see his art as... Well, as art.


Instead, they held the artist liable for damage to property, the court set a suspended sentence. But in general, he tried to create the image of a partisan hero: street artist who single-handedly fights against powerful corporations.

9. Carlo Crivelli

This 15th-century artist was famous for his altars, delicate figures of women - saints, images of fruits. His art seems more worldly than pious. In fact, the only reason Crivelli was in all those small towns decorating cathedral altars was because he was persona non grata in Venice on charges of the sex crime of adultery, seducing another man's wife.

10. Richard Dadd

And finally, the most horrific crime. (Wrote about him once).

Parricide. Brilliantly gifted young artist Victorian era tragically stricken with mental illness. He was examined by a psychiatrist, but the father did not believe the diagnosis, which can be perceived as fate, because the father had many reasons to call a doctor and trust his conclusion.

First, the strange, very strange behavior of the son. One storage of 300 tons of eggs in a room is worth something! Secondly, heredity, which the father knew very well. Richard Dadd spent the rest of his life in prisons and mental asylums, where he wrote fantastic fairy tale scenes of powerful intensity. He died at Broadmoor.

That's what he was, a genius from Bedlam.

Oddly enough, truly mysterious and mystical stories are associated with many famous canvases. I will say more, many art critics believe that almost Satan himself had a hand in creating a number of paintings. Too often these fateful masterpieces have happened amazing facts and inexplicable events - fires, deaths, the madness of the authors ...


One of the most famous “cursed” paintings is “The Crying Boy” – a reproduction of a painting by the Spanish artist Giovanni Bragolin. The history of its creation is as follows: the artist wanted to paint a portrait crying baby and took his little son. But, since the baby could not cry to order, the father deliberately brought him to tears, lighting matches in front of his face.

The artist knew that his son was terribly afraid of fire, but art was dearer to him than the nerves of his own child, and he continued to mock him. Once brought to hysterics, the kid could not stand it and shouted, shedding tears: “You yourself burn!” This curse did not take long to come true - two weeks later the boy died of pneumonia, and soon his father was burned alive in his own house ... This is the backstory. The painting, or rather its reproduction, gained its sinister fame in 1985, in England.

This happened thanks to a series of strange coincidences - in Northern England, one after another, residential buildings began to ignite. There were human casualties. Some victims mentioned that only a cheap reproduction depicting a crying child miraculously survived from all the property. And there were more and more such reports, until, finally, one of the fire inspectors publicly announced that in all the burnt houses, without exception, the “Crying Boy” was found intact.

Immediately, the newspapers were flooded with a wave of letters, which reported various accidents, deaths and fires that occurred after the owners bought this painting. Of course, the “Crying Boy” immediately began to be considered cursed, the story of its creation surfaced, overgrown with rumors and fiction ... As a result, one of the newspapers published an official statement that everyone who has this reproduction should immediately get rid of it, and the authorities henceforth it is forbidden to acquire and keep it at home.

To this day, The Crying Boy is notorious, especially in northern England. By the way, the original has not yet been found. True, some doubters (especially here in Russia) deliberately hung this portrait on their wall, and, it seems, no one burned down. But still, there are very few who want to test the legend in practice.

Another well-known “fiery masterpiece” is the “Water Lilies” by the Impressionist Monet. The artist himself was the first to suffer from it - his workshop almost burned down for unknown reasons.

Then the new owners of the Water Lilies burned down - a cabaret in Montmartre, the home of a French patron of the arts, and even the New York Museum contemporary arts. Currently, the painting is in the Mormoton Museum in France, and does not show its “fire hazardous” properties. Bye.

Another, less well-known and outwardly unremarkable painting - "arsonist" hangs in the Royal Museum of Edinburgh. This is a portrait of an elderly man with outstretched hand. According to legend, sometimes the fingers on the hand of an old man painted in oil begin to move. And the one who saw this unusual phenomenon will surely die from fire in the very near future.

Two famous victims of the portrait are Lord Seymour and Sea Captain Belfast. Both of them claimed to have seen the old man move his fingers, and both subsequently died in the fire. Superstitious townspeople even demanded that the director of the museum remove the dangerous painting from sin, but he, of course, did not agree - it is this unprepossessing and not particularly valuable portrait that attracts most visitors.

The famous "La Gioconda" by Leonardo da Vinci not only delights, but also frightens people. In addition to assumptions, fictions, legends about the work itself and Mona Lisa's smile, there is a theory that this very famous portrait in the world has an extremely negative effect on the contemplator. For example, more than a hundred cases are officially registered when visitors, after seeing a picture for a long time, lost consciousness.

The most famous incident happened to French writer Stendhal, who fainted while admiring the masterpiece. It is known that the Mona Lisa herself, who posed for the artist, died young, at the age of 28. And you Great master Leonardo did not work on any of his creations so long and carefully as on the Gioconda. For six years, until his death, Leonardo rewrote and corrected the picture, but he did not achieve what he wanted to the end.

Velazquez's painting "Venus with a Mirror" also enjoyed deservedly notoriety. Everyone who bought it either went bankrupt or died a violent death. Even museums did not really want to include its main composition, and the picture constantly changed its “registration”. The case ended with the fact that one day a crazy visitor attacked the canvas and cut it with a knife.

Another “cursed” painting that is widely known is the work of the Californian surrealist artist “Hands Resist Him” (“Hands resist him”) Bill Stoneham. The artist painted it in 1972 from a photograph in which he and his younger sister stand in front of their home. In the picture, a boy with indistinct features and a doll the size of a living girl are frozen in front of a glass door, to which the small hands of children are pressed from the inside. There are many things associated with this picture. creepy stories. It all started with the fact that the first art critic who saw and appreciated the work suddenly died.

Then I bought the painting. American actor, which also did not last long. After his death, the work disappeared for a short time, but then it was accidentally found in the garbage heap. The family that picked up the nightmarish masterpiece thought of hanging it in the nursery. As a result, the little daughter began to run into her parents' bedroom every night and scream that the children in the picture were fighting and changing their location. My father installed a motion-sensing camera in the room, and it went off several times during the night.

Of course, the family hurried to get rid of such a gift of fate, and soon Hands Resist Him was put up for an online auction. And then numerous letters rained down on the address of the organizers complaining that when viewing the picture, people became ill, and some even had heart attacks. Bought by its owner art gallery, and now complaints began to come to his address. He was even approached by two American exorcists offering their services. And psychics who saw the picture unanimously claim that evil emanates from it.

Photo - prototype of the painting “Hands resist him”:

There are several masterpieces of Russian painting that also have sad stories. For example, the painting “Troika” by Perov, known to everyone since school. This touching and sad picture depicts three peasant children from poor families who are pulling a heavy burden, harnessed to it in the manner of draft horses. In the center is a blond-haired little boy. Perov was looking for a child for a painting until he met a woman with a 12-year-old son named Vasya, who were walking through Moscow on a pilgrimage.

Vasya remained the only consolation to the mother, who buried her husband and other children. At first she did not want her son to pose for the painter, but then she agreed. However, shortly after the completion of the picture, the boy died ... It is known that after the death of her son, a poor woman came to Perov, begging him to sell her a portrait of her beloved child, but the picture was already hanging in Tretyakov Gallery. True, Perov responded to his mother's grief and painted a portrait of Vasya separately for her.

One of the brightest and most extraordinary geniuses of Russian painting, Mikhail Vrubel, has works that are also associated with the personal tragedies of the artist himself. So, the portrait of his adored son Savva was written by him shortly before the death of the child. Moreover, the boy fell ill unexpectedly and died suddenly. And the Demon Downcast had a detrimental effect on the psyche and health of Vrubel himself.

The artist could not tear himself away from the picture, he continued to finish the face of the defeated Spirit, and also change the color. “Demon Defeated” was already hanging at the exhibition, and Vrubel kept coming to the hall, not paying attention to the visitors, sat down in front of the picture and continued to work, as if possessed. Relatives were worried about his condition, and he was examined by the famous Russian psychiatrist Bekhterev. The diagnosis was terrible - tassels of the spinal cord, near insanity and death. Vrubel was admitted to the hospital, but the treatment did not help much, and he soon died.

An interesting story is connected with the painting “Maslenitsa”, which for a long time adorned the lobby of the Ukraine Hotel. She hung and hung, no one really looked at her, until it suddenly became clear that the author of this work was a mentally ill person named Kuplin, who copied the canvas of the artist Antonov in his own way. Actually, there is nothing particularly terrible or outstanding in the picture of the mentally ill, but for six months it stirred up the expanses of Runet.

Painting by Antonov

Kuplin painting

One student wrote a blog post about her in 2006. Its essence boiled down to the fact that, according to a professor at one of the Moscow universities, there is one hundred percent, but non-obvious sign in the picture, by which it is immediately clear that the artist is crazy. And even allegedly on this basis, you can immediately make the correct diagnosis. But, as the student wrote, the cunning professor did not discover the sign, but only gave vague hints. And so, they say, people, help, whoever can, because I can’t find it myself, I’m all exhausted and tired. What started here is easy to imagine.

The post was distributed throughout the network, many users rushed to look for an answer and scold the professor. The painting became wildly popular, as did the student's blog and the professor's name. No one was able to solve the riddle, and in the end, when everyone was tired of this story, they decided:

1. There is no sign, and the professor deliberately “divorced” the students so that they would not skip lectures.
2. The professor is a psycho himself (there were even facts that he was really treated abroad).
3. Kuplin associated himself with the snowman that looms in the background of the picture, and this is the main clue to the mystery.
4. There was no professor, and the whole story is a brilliant flash mob.

By the way, many original guesses of this sign were also given, but none of them was found to be true. History gradually faded away, although even now you can sometimes come across its echoes in RuNet. As for the picture, for some it really makes an eerie impression and causes discomfort.

During the time of Pushkin, the portrait of Maria Lopukhina was one of the main "horror stories". The girl lived a short and unhappy life, and after painting the portrait she died of consumption. Her father Ivan Lopukhin was a famous mystic and master of the Masonic lodge. That is why rumors spread that he managed to lure the spirit of his dead daughter into this portrait. And that if young girls look at the picture, they will soon die. According to the version of salon gossips, the portrait of Mary killed at least ten noblewomen of marriageable age ...

The philanthropist Tretyakov put an end to the rumors, who in 1880 bought the portrait for his gallery. There was no significant mortality among the visitors. The conversations subsided. But the sediment remained.

Dozens of people who, one way or another, came into contact with Edvard Munch's painting "The Scream", the cost of which experts estimate at 70 million dollars, were exposed to evil rock: they fell ill, quarreled with loved ones, fell into severe depression, or even suddenly died. All this created a bad reputation for the painting, so museum visitors looked at it with apprehension, remembering the terrible stories that were told about the masterpiece.

One day a museum clerk accidentally dropped a painting. After some time, he began to have terrible headaches. I must say that before this incident, he had no idea what a headache was. The migraine attacks became more frequent and more acute, and the case ended with the fact that the poor fellow committed suicide.

On another occasion, a museum worker dropped a painting while it was being hung from one wall to another. A week later, he was in a horrendous car accident that left him with broken legs, arms, several ribs, a fractured pelvis, and a severe concussion.

One of the museum visitors tried to touch the painting with his finger. A few days later, a fire broke out at his house, in which this man was burned alive.

The life of Edvard Munch himself, born in 1863, was a series of endless tragedies and upheavals. Illness, death of relatives, madness. His mother died of tuberculosis when the child was 5 years old. After 9 years, Edward's beloved sister Sophia died of a serious illness. Then brother Andreas died, and doctors diagnosed his younger sister with schizophrenia.

In the early 1990s, Munch suffered a severe nervous breakdown and underwent electroshock treatment for a long time. He never married because the thought of sex terrified him. He died at the age of 81, leaving a huge creative heritage as a gift to the city of Oslo: 1200 paintings, 4500 sketches and 18 thousand graphic works. But the pinnacle of his work remains, of course, "The Scream".

The Dutch artist Pieter Brueghel the Elder painted The Adoration of the Magi for two years. He "copied" the Virgin Mary from his cousin. She was a barren woman, for which she received constant cuffs from her husband. It was she who, as simple medieval Dutch gossiped, "infected" the picture. Four times "Magi" were bought by private collectors. And each time the same story was repeated: no children were born in a family for 10-12 years ...

Finally, in 1637, the painting was bought by the architect Jacob van Campen. By that time, he already had three children, so the curse did not really scare him.

Probably the most famous bad picture of the Internet space with the following story: A certain schoolgirl (often referred to as Japanese) before opening her veins (jumping out the window, eating pills, hanging herself, drowning herself in the bathroom) painted this picture.

If you look at her for 5 minutes in a row, the girl will change (eyes will turn red, hair will turn black, fangs will appear). In fact, it is clear that the picture is clearly not drawn by hand, as many like to say. Although no one gives clear answers how this picture appeared.

The next picture hangs modestly without a frame in one of the shops in Vinnitsa. "Rain Woman" is the most expensive of all works: it costs $500. According to the sellers, the painting has already been bought three times, and then returned. Clients explain that they are dreaming about her. And someone even says that he knows this lady, but does not remember where. And everyone who has ever looked into her white eyes will forever remember the feeling of a rainy day, silence, anxiety and fear.

Where did unusual picture, said its author - Vinnitsa artist Svetlana Telets. “In 1996 I graduated from the Odessa art university them. Grekova, - Svetlana recalls. - And six months before the birth of "Women" it always seemed to me that someone was constantly watching me. I drove away such thoughts from myself, and then one day, by the way, not at all rainy, I sat in front of a blank canvas and thought what to draw. And suddenly she clearly saw the contours of a woman, her face, colors, shades. In an instant, I noticed all the details of the image. I wrote the main thing quickly - I managed it in five hours. It felt like someone was holding my hand. And then I painted for another month.”

Arriving in Vinnitsa, Svetlana exhibited the painting in the local art salon. Art connoisseurs approached her every now and then and shared the same thoughts that she herself had during her work.

“It was interesting to observe,” says the artist, “how subtly a thing can materialize a thought and inspire it in other people.”

A few years ago, the first customer appeared. A lonely businesswoman walked around the halls for a long time, looking closely. Having bought "Woman", she hung it in her bedroom.
Two weeks later, a night call rang out in Svetlana's apartment: “Please pick her up. I can not sleep. It seems that there is someone in the apartment besides me. I even took it off the wall, hid it behind the closet, but I still can’t.”

Then a second buyer appeared. Then a young man bought the painting. And he didn't last long either. He brought it to the artist himself. And he didn't even take the money back.
“I dream about her,” he complained. - Every night he appears and walks around me like a shadow. I'm starting to go crazy. I'm afraid of this picture!

The third buyer, having learned about the notoriety of "Women", only brushed it off. He even said that the face of the sinister lady seemed sweet to him. And she will surely get along with him. Didn't get along.
“At first I didn’t notice how white her eyes were,” he recalled. And then they started showing up everywhere. Headaches began, unreasonable unrest. And do I need it?

So "Rain Woman" returned to the artist again. A rumor spread around the city that this picture was cursed. One night can drive you crazy. The artist herself is not happy that she wrote such horror. However, Sveta has not yet lost optimism:
- Each picture is born for a specific person. I believe that there will be someone for whom "Woman" was written. Someone is looking for her - just like she is looking for him.

It would be interesting to know how many among my readers there are those who wanted to try to write and take up painting seriously, but stopped not because of lack of time or lack of imagination, but because of the widespread stereotype that success in painting can only be achieved after long years of art education?

Many people think that self-taught artists can only write as a hobby, but they cannot count on success, recognition and wealth.

In my conversations with many people, I hear this opinion in a variety of forms. I even know many artists who write enthusiastically and very well, but consider their paintings just fun only because they themselves have not received an art education.

For some reason they think that an artist is a profession that must certainly be confirmed by a diploma and grades. And while there is no diploma, you cannot become an artist, good pictures you can’t write, and even if you write a work “for yourself”, then it’s forbidden to even think about selling it or putting it up for public judgment.

Allegedly, the paintings of self-taught artists are immediately recognized by experts as unprofessional, and will only cause criticism and ridicule.

I dare say - it's all nonsense! Not because I'm the only one who thinks so. But because history knows dozens of successful self-taught artists, whose paintings have taken their rightful place in the history of painting!

Moreover, some of these artists managed to become famous during their lifetime, and their work influenced the entire world of painting. Moreover, there are among them both artists of past centuries and modern self-taught artists.

For example, I will tell you only about some of these autodidacts.

1. Paul Gauguin / Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin

Perhaps one of the greatest self-taught artists. His path to the world of painting began with the fact that he, working as a broker and earning good money, began to acquire paintings by contemporary artists.

This hobby fascinated him, he learned to understand painting well and at some point began to try to paint himself. Art fascinated him so much that he began to devote less and less time to work and write more and more.

The painting "Sewing Woman" was painted by Gauguin when he was a stockbroker

At some point Gauguin decides to devote himself entirely to creativity, leaves his family and leaves for France to communicate with like-minded people and work. Here he began to paint really significant canvases, but his financial problems also began here.

Communication with the artistic elite and working with other artists became his only school.

Finally, Gauguin decides to completely break with civilization and merge with nature in order to create in paradise, as he considered, conditions. To do this, he sails to the Pacific Islands, first to Tahiti, then to the Marquesas Islands.

Here he is disappointed in the simplicity and wildness of the "tropical paradise", gradually goes crazy and ... writes his best pictures.

Paintings by Paul Gauguin

Alas, recognition came to Gauguin after his death. Three years after his death, in 1906, an exhibition of his paintings was organized in Paris, which were completely sold out and later entered the most expensive collections in the world. His work "When is the wedding?" ranks among the most expensive paintings peace.

2. Jack Vettriano (aka Jack Hoggan)

The history of this master is in a sense the opposite of the previous one. If Gauguin died in poverty, painting his paintings under the yoke of unrecognized, then Hoggan managed to earn millions during his lifetime and become a philanthropist only at the expense of his paintings.

At the same time, he began to write at the age of 21, when a friend gave him a set watercolor paints. The new business fascinated him so much that he began to try to copy the works of famous masters in museums. And then he began to paint pictures on his own subjects.

As a result, at his first exhibition, all the paintings were sold out, and later his work "The Singing Butler" became a sensation in the art world: it was bought for $ 1.3 million. Hollywood stars and Russian oligarchs, although most art critics consider them to be completely bad taste.

Painting by Jack Vettriano

Large incomes allow Jack to pay scholarships for low-income gifted students and do charity work. And all this - without an academic education- At the age of 16, young Hoggan began working as a miner, after which he did not officially study anywhere.

3. Henri Rousseau / Henri Julien Felix Rousseau

One of the most famous representatives of primitivism in painting, Rousseau was born into a family of plumbers, after graduating from school he served in the army, then worked at customs.

At this time, he began to paint, and it was the lack of education that allowed him to form his own technique, in which the richness of colors, vivid plots and saturation of the canvas are combined with the simplicity and primitiveness of the image itself.

Paintings by Henri Rousseau

Even during the life of the artist, his paintings were highly appreciated by Guillaume Appolinaire and Gertrude Stein.

4 Maurice Utrillo

Another French autodidact artist, without art education, he managed to become a world-famous celebrity. His mother was a model in art workshops, she also suggested to him the basic principles of painting.

Later, all his lessons consisted in observing how great artists paint in Montmartre. For a long time his paintings were not recognized by serious critics and he was interrupted only by occasional sales of his works to the common public.

Painting by Maurice Utrillo

But already by the age of 30, his work began to be noticed, at the age of forty he became famous, and at 42 receives the Legion of Honor for his contribution to the arts in France. After that, for another 26 years he worked and did not worry at all about the lack of a diploma in art education.

5 Maurice de Vlaminck

French self-taught artist, whose entire formal education ended in music school- parents wanted to see him as a cellist. AT adolescence began to paint, at the age of 17 he was engaged in self-education with his friend Henri Rigalon, and at 30 he sold his first paintings.

Painting by Maurice de Vlaminck

Until that time, he managed to feed himself and his wife with cello lessons and performances with musical groups in various restaurants. With the advent of fame, he completely devoted himself to painting, and his paintings, in the style of Fauvism, in the future seriously influenced the work of the Impressionists of the 20th century.

6. Aimo Katayainen / Aimo Katajainen

Finnish contemporary artist, whose work belongs to the genre of "naive art". There is a lot of blue color in the paintings - ultramarine, which in turn is very calming ... The plots of the paintings are calm and peaceful.

Paintings by Aimo Katajainen

Before becoming an artist, he studied finance, worked in an alcoholic rehabilitation clinic, but painted all this time as a hobby, until his paintings began to sell and bring in a good income, enough to live on.

7. Ivan Generalic / Ivan Generalic

Croatian primitive artist who made a name for himself with paintings of rural life. He became famous by chance, when one of the students of the Zagreb Academy noticed his paintings and invited him to hold an exhibition.

Painting by Ivan Generalich

After his solo exhibitions were held in Sofia, Paris, Baden-Baden, Sao Paulo and Brussels, he became one of the most famous Croatian representatives of primitivism.

8 Anna Mary Robertson Moses(aka Grandma Moses)

Famous American artist who started painting at the age of 67 after the death of her husband, already suffering from arthritis. She had no art education, but a New York collector accidentally noticed her painting in the window of the house.

Painting by Anna Moses

He offered to hold an exhibition of her work. Grandma Moses' paintings quickly became so popular that her exhibitions were held in many European countries and later in Japan. At the age of 89, Grandmother received an award from US President Harry Truman. It is noteworthy that the artist lived for 101 years!

9. Ekaterina Medvedeva

The most famous representative of contemporary naive art in Russia, Ekaterina Medvedeva did not receive an art education, but she began to write when she worked part-time at the post office. She made it to the top 10,000 today. artists of the world from the 18th century.

Painting by Ekaterina Medvedeva

10. Kieron Williams / Kieron Williamson

English prodigy autodidact, who began to paint in the style of impressionism at the age of 5, and at 8 he put his paintings up for auction for the first time. At the age of 13, he sold 33 of his paintings at auction for $235 thousand in half an hour, and today (he is already 18) he is a dollar millionaire.

Paintings by Kieron Williams

Kieron paints 6 paintings a week, and his work is constantly lined up. He simply does not have time for education.

11. Paul Ledent / Pol Ledent

Belgian self-taught artist and creative person. got carried away fine arts closer to 40 years old. Judging by the pictures, he experiments a lot. I studied painting on my own ... and immediately put the knowledge into practice.

Although Paul took a few painting lessons, most of his hobby was studied by himself. Participated in exhibitions, paints paintings to order.

Paintings by Paul Ledent

In my experience, creatively thinking people write interestingly and freely, whose head is not stuffed with academic artistic knowledge. And by the way, they achieve some success in the art niche no less than professional artists. It's just that such people are not afraid to look at ordinary things a little wider.

12. Jorge Maciel / JORGE MACIEL

Brazilian autodidact, contemporary talented self-taught artist. He produces wonderful flowers and colorful still lifes.

Paintings by Jorge Maciel

This list of self-taught artists can be continued for a very long time. It can be said that Van Gogh, one of the most influential artists in the world, he did not receive a formal education, studied sporadically with various masters, and never learned to paint the human figure (which, by the way, shaped his style).

You can remember Philip Malyavin, Niko Pirosmani, Bill Traylor and many other names: many famous artists were self-taught, that is, they studied independently!

All of them are confirmation of the fact that it is not necessary to have a special art education to be successful in painting.

Yes, it is easier with him, but you can become a good artist and without it. After all, no one canceled self-education ... As well as without talent - we have already talked about this .. The main thing is to have a burning desire to learn on your own and discover all the bright facets of painting in practice.


text: Svetlana Fomina

Recently, a dispute broke out on Facebook between scientists and artists after I posted a clip on the wall with Aelita Andre, a Russian-Australian not quite ordinary artist. Paintings by 4-year-old Aelita are exhibited at the Brunswick Street Gallery in Melbourne and are valued at between $1,000 and $24,000. The total cost of 32 sold paintings by Aelita is estimated at 800 thousand dollars. Her first solo exhibition titled "Wonder of Color" was held in New York in June 2011.

The girl's parents are artists, her father is Australian, and her mother is Russian. Aelita's paintings are pure abstraction, there is a mastery of tools and materials. The girl grows up not only in an atmosphere conducive to the development of artistic taste and the intuitive consolidation of artistic language skills, but also has complete freedom in the means of self-expression.
Here is the clip:

Behind a beautiful picture is almost always hard work, which, as we all used to think, is rewarded with universal recognition with all the consequences.

But when an artist has not passed the stage of formation, can he be called a talented artist, or should this phenomenon be attributed to a banal miracle of nature?

Well, what kind of scam can there be if a child draws, many people like the pictures and are successfully sold?

1. Aelita Andre, The Leopard or the Luck Dragon (detail) 137x152 cm

2. Aelita Andre, the Dog & the Alien-2 panels 60"x60"

3. Aelita Andre, Yellow Thinking Man 40"x30"


Maybe it's more important to think about the girl's future? And here there are several possible ways of development.

1) With age, the girl's talent will turn into ordinary abilities, as happens with most outstanding children.

2) The worst thing that can happen is a bright fall after a bright take-off, like, for example, the well-known story with Samantha Smith.

3) The Aelita project is nothing more than a project that sooner or later will die, and what will happen to the girl herself is unknown. But we will have to watch everything that happens and follow the development of little Aelita, thinking about creating our own Aelita.

four) ? What do you think about this phenomenon? Would you like your child to become famous and in demand at 4 years old? Do you give him complete freedom in development, or do you think that restrictions are important, how important is both a harsh upbringing and discipline?
Do you consider a girl an artist, or can you be a real artist only consciously?