Originally published in Frieze Masters magazine, September 2019.

Sometimes, a birch tree is just a birch tree. In Russia, however, birches have long been not only vital material resources (their bark used for baskets and shoes; their wood carved into furniture) but also powerful folk symbols of purity, femininity and fertility. In the 19th century, the Russian intelligentsia’s fascination with such traditions coincided with the rise of landscape painting. As interactions with Europe grew (through trade, travel, culture and war), debate raged over Russia’s identity and destiny: to ‘catch up’ with modern Europe or to stand uniquely apart? For those on both sides of the argument, the countryside came to be regarded as a repository of true Russianness and viewing landscape painting became a way for urban intellectuals and landed aristocrats alike to identify with their Russian homeland (rodina). And, as a reference familiar to all Russians – from the royal House of Romanov to the peasantry – the birch tree offered the possibility of a shared national identity.

Isaac Levitan’s Spring, High Water (1897) is one of the most celebrated depictions of this most commonplace of trees. From an early age, it was apparent that Levitan was an artist of rare talent. He was just 17 when his father, a railroad worker, died. Orphaned and homeless, he could no longer afford his studies at the Moscow School of Art. But, recognizing his potential, the school waived his fees and provided him with a stipend for materials. There, Levitan became great friends with the writer Anton Chekhov, whose brother, Nikolay, was a fellow student. Levitan’s technical prowess and his ability to imbue unprepossessing Russian landscapes with a powerful emotional charge saw his reputation quickly blossom.

Spring, High Water is a late work and one of Levitan’s most influential. Between the viewer and the watery horizon, most of the painting’s middle ground is composed of birch trees, their slim verticality emphasized by reflections in the seasonal floodwater. The composition is gently sinuous, framed by a curving line of land to the left and a bending birch to the right. A wooden boat in the foreground and wooden huts in the distance provide the only traces of human presence. This humble scene could be any­where in rural Russia – and that was precisely the point. Although aware of Impressionism (Levitan visited Paris several times), he was never content to capture light for its own sake. Levitan’s limited colour palette and deliberately modest subject matter sought to evoke an authentically Russian sense of place, distinct from the superficial attractions of European landscapes.

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