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Jan Ksawery Kaniewski, also known in Italian as Francesco Saverio Kaniewski (1805 13 April 1867) was a Polish painter trained in St. Petersburg who spent several years in Rome. He was particularly known for his portraits and his depictions of historical and Biblical scenes.

Self-portrait (1855)
Self-portrait (1855)
Portrait of Sergey Uvarov (1844)
Portrait of Sergey Uvarov (1844)

Life and career


Kaniewski was born in Krasiłów, Krasyliv in Podolia, Ukraine. He was educated in the Liceum Krzemienieckie in Krzemieniec, where he received his first lessons in drawing and painting from Józef Pitschmann. Between 1827 and 1833 he studied in the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg. After graduating with the title "free artist" (Polish: wolny artysta), he traveled to Rome thanks to a government grant, arriving in November 1833, via Dresden, Vienna, Bologna and Florence. In Rome he found fame, thanks to his portrait of Pope Gregory XVI, commissioned by Tsar Nicholas I, for which he was awarded the Order of the Golden Spur and was elected a member of the Accademia Virtuosi of the Pantheon. While in Rome he also painted Gaetano Moroni.

In the years 1842–1846 he was back in St. Petersburg, where in 1845, for his work Portrait of Field-Marshal Iwan Paskiewicz he received the title of Academician. In 1846 he moved to Warsaw, where after the death of Aleksander Kokular he occupied the chair of drawing and figure painting in the School of Fine Arts, of which from 1858 to 1864 he was director, with the patronage of Tsar Alexander II. In 1860 he became one of the organisers of the Society for the Encouragement of the Arts (Towarzystwo Zachęty Sztuk Pięknych), with which he remained associated until the end of his life.

After the School of Fine Arts was forcibly closed in 1864, Kaniewski continued to lead a drawing class.

His work included many portraits of members of the Russian Imperial family, including Tsar Alexander II, and dignitaries of Congress Poland.


Sources




Media related to Jan Ksawery Kaniewski at Wikimedia Commons



На других языках


[de] Jan Ksawery Kaniewski

Jan Ksawery Kaniewski, in Italien auch als Francesco Saverio bekannt (* 10. Mai 1805 in Krassyliw; † 13. April 1867 in Warschau) war ein polnischer Maler, der viele Persönlichkeiten porträtierte, darunter Zar Alexander II., Papst Gregor XVI. und Gaetano Moroni.
- [en] Jan Ksawery Kaniewski

[fr] Jan Ksawery Kaniewski

Jan Ksawery Kaniewski, aussi connu sous son nom en italien, Francesco Saverio Kaniewski, traduit en français Jean Xavier Kaniewski, est un artiste-peintre polonais, né à Krasiłów ou Krassyliv (Podolie, Ukraine, Empire russe) le 10 mai 1805, et mort à Varsovie le 13 avril 1867 (à 61 ans).

[it] Jan Ksawery Kaniewski

Jan Ksawery Kaniewski noto in Italia come Francesco Saverio (Krasiłów, 10 maggio 1805 – Varsavia, 13 aprile 1867) è stato un pittore polacco, ritrattista di molti personaggi tra cui lo zar Alessandro II, papa Gregorio XVI e Gaetano Moroni.

[ru] Каневский, Ян Ксаверий

Ян Ксаверий Каневский (польск. Jan Ksawery Kaniewski, Иван-Ксаверий Ксавериевич Каневский, подписывался также как Саверио Франческо; 1805, Красилов Подольской губернии (теперь Хмельницкой области Украина) — 13 июня 1867, Варшава) — польский художник-портретист, академик Императорской Академии художеств.



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