Aleksey Korin

He was a member of the Peredvizhniki and a professor at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.

That same year, he joined a group of painters led by Isaac Levitan who painted en plein aire in the vicinity of Plyos.

[1] After 1900, he spent the summer months at a small village in Tver Governorate and began teaching at the Stroganov School for Technical Drawing.

From 1911 to 1912, he painted murals at the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Sofia, and helped restore the iconography at his former place of apprenticeship, the Trinity Lavra.

After the October Revolution, he left Moscow and settled in Marino, where he opened a workshop.

Self-portrait (1915)
The Sick Artist