Maksim Dmitriev and the Renaissance of Orthodox Monasticism in Late Imperial Russia, an exhibition of approximately thirty modern prints made from the Russian photographer's original negatives.
Maksim Dmitriev and the Renaissance of Orthodox Monasticism in Late Imperial Russia'
Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) will present Chronicling Faith: Maksim
Dmitriev and the Renaissance of Orthodox Monasticism in Late Imperial
Russia, an exhibition of approximately thirty modern prints made from the
Russian photographer's original negatives. The exhibition will open on
February 1, and it will run through June 15, 2003.
Chronicling Faith: An Overview
Maksim Dmitriev (1858-1948) attempted through his work to both record
faithfully and comment critically on provincial life in late imperial
Russia. Chronicling Faith offers an evocative portrayal of religious life
among the Orthodox population of the Volga region centered on the city of
Nizhnii Novgorod (about 250 miles east of Moscow) during the late nineteenth
and the early twentieth centuries.
Chronicling Faith is part of "Teaching with Art," WCMA's series of
exhibitions that support Williams College courses. This exhibition has been
arranged by William G. Wagner, Brown Professor of History, in conjunction
with his course 'Muscovy and the Russian Empire.'
"WCMA is first and foremost a teaching museum," says Director Linda Shearer.
"When our exhibitions are organized in conjunction with courses at Williams
College, we are realizing our mission to its full potential. By helping Bill
Wagner to enhance his class, we are exposing students‹and all our
visitors‹to rare material they would not have the opportunity to see
elsewhere."
Maksim Dmitriev: An Important Historical Source
"Dmitriev was a pioneer in the development of photojournalism and the use of
photography as a medium of social criticism," says Professor Wagner. "His
work therefore reflects an important transitional moment in the history of
Russian and European photography."
Through Dmitriev's photographs viewers encounter such phenomena as the
remarkable renaissance of female monasticism and growth of religious
pilgrimage, the stern face of the female monastic leadership, and the
religious spectacle as well as social dynamic of icon processions. The
photographs also provide a rare glimpse of the isolated Old Believer
monastic communities that dotted the forests to the north and east of the
Volga River.
"Dmitriev's work represents a valuable but elusive historical source for
those trying to understand the role of religion and the relationship of
women to Orthodoxy in Russia in the last decades before the Revolution,"
says Professor Wagner.
Related Lecture April 10
In combination with Chronicling Faith, Professor Wagner will give a public
lecture on Thursday, April 10. His talk, "Exposing Realism: Maksim Dmitriev
and the Photographic Depiction of Female Monastic Life in Late Imperial
Russia," will begin at 4 p.m. at the museum.
This exhibition is drawn from the rich holdings of the Dmitriev collection
at the State Archive of Nizhegorod Region. Chronicling Faith is organized by
Professor Wagner with Stefanie Spray Jandl, Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial
Associate.
The Williams College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free and the
museum is wheelchair accessible.
Image:
Maksim Dmitriev (Russian, 1858-1948)
Eldress, Olenino Old Believer Convent, village of Olenino, Russia
late 19th-early 20th century
Reproduced from the State Archive of Nizhegorod Region
Contact: Jonathan Cannon, Public Relations Coordinator
Williams College Museum of Art
15 Lawrence Hall Drive, Suite 2
Williamstown MA 01267
413.597.3178