| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, Russia |
Sergey Vasilyevich Ivanov's painting - King (1902) operates on multiple symbolic registers depicting sixteenth century autocratic rituals while inscribing contemporary anxieties about power and subordination. The composition's spatial hierarchy ( the tsar/king elevated above state subjects ) visualises the absolutist ideology of Muscovite statecraft, where sovereign authority demands total bodily submission. The red caftans worn by the guards fucntion as an emblem of state machinery, their syncronized uniformity contrasting sharply with the individualised poses of the masses below, suggesting bureaucratic uniformity versus organic human variety. The snow blanketed landscape rendered in muted tones provides a symbolic counterpoint - winter as both emptiness and endurance which perhaps reflects the harsh conditions of the tsarist rule. Ivanov created this art work embodying a clear narrative in a realistic manner with attention to detail, creating oddly symbolic dimensions beyond surface realism. Painted in 1902, amid political ferment preceeding the 1905 Russian Revolution - the painting likely functions as a historical allegory. The distant Tsarist past becomes a medium for critiquing present autocracy.
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