15 December 2013

Ivan Bilibin


Ivan Bilibin
Father Frost
circa 1932

     'Dost thou know me? - me, the red-nosed Frost?' The young girl, frozen from her ears to the tips of her toes, does not know this stranger of the forest and yet, despite her predicament, she remains sweet and polite and always kind to him. He thus tests her stamina, doubting her character and way of talk: he sends frigid winds through her hair and fierce, snowy gusts against her skin. He brandishes the coldest temperatures of his deepest winters, whipping the trees and bushes all around into a frozen stupor, but still the girl replies, 'I am very comfortable, dear Father Frost'.
     Another of Aleksandr Afanasev's tales, Father Frost is seen illustrated beautifully by the famous Bilibin. From the tracery on the girl's red trunk to the heavy woolen weave of her mustard overcoat, and from Father Frost's green chequered gloves to his billowing beard, the artist skilfully restricts colour to the scene's only living creatures, leaving the rest to be doused under the blanket of this one of many Russian winters. By tracing with dark ink the shadows of branches and patches of bark, Bilibin allows the negative white spaces to act as the individual pockets of snow. He gives texture to each heap without conforming to a form of hyper realism - without even touching his brush to certain parts of the canvas - all so as to draw out a perspective particular to him, and for us. A light dusk falls gently in the background, seen over the tops of those blue-crowned trees, like the ending to a simply perfect tale.