Constantin Westchiloff
Painting, Visual Artist
1877 – 1945
Who was Constantin Westchiloff?
Constantin Alexandrovich Westchiloff was a Russian-American Impressionist painter.
Westchiloff was born in Russia in 1877. He Americanized his name to Constantin A. Westchiloff when he emigrated to the United States in 1935.
He studied under Ilya Repin at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg from 1898. He won an award in 1904 for the painting, "Ivan the Terrible After the Triumph of Kazan." He held a foreign study fellowship from the Royal Academy in 1905-06. He exhibited in the Royal Academy's Fall Exhibit of 1906, showing "Breakthrough of the Cruiser Askold in 1904 in the Yellow Sea," which documented the Russo-Japanese War. In that Academy exhibit he also showed portraits of Count Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky and of Lieut. S. Poguljajeff. He was also active in theatre design at the Petrograd Technical Institute.
He emigrated from Soviet Russia in 1922, lived in Italy, France, and immigrated to the United States in 1935 and settled in New York, where he died.
Throughout his career Westchiloff painted a wide variety of subjects in the Impressionist style, but was particularly noted for his seascapes and harbor scenes.
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- Born
- 1877
Russia - Also known as
- Konstantin Westchilov
- Education
- Imperial Academy of Arts
- Died
- 1945
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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