Back in Moscow, Antonova was at school until 1940, when she enrolled in art history at Moscow State Uni. After Hitler attacked the USSR in June 1941 she started training as a nurse. Four months later she and her mother joined the mass evacuation of Muscovites to the Urals. It was a horrific experience, which Antonova graphically described in a interview with a former British ambassador Braithwaite for his book Moscow 1941. The train was heavily bombed 10km outside Moscow. Everyone rushed for shelter into the surrounding wood.
When they reached Samara there was nowhere for them to live, so she and her mother spent the winter in a railway sleeping car. In Jan 1942, after German troops started to retreat following heroic resistance in Moscow, she and her mother returned to the city. Irina was not considered an essential worker, so she hid in the luggage rack when the patrols came round the train, and also managed to evade them at the Moscow station.
Working as a nurse, she returned to Moscow Uni and on graduation in 1945, joined the staff of Moscow’s Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts where she spent many decades. One of her first jobs was to help in storing art collections taken from Germany by the victorious Red Army. They included a hoard of golden crowns and jewellery excavated by Heinrich Schliemann in Troy, as well as 700+ pictures from the Dresden Gallery in East Germany. The Dresden pieces were returned in 1955. The Trojan works remain in Moscow.
Thanks to her Bolshevik father, Irina had a history that made it easier for her to negotiate with Soviet cultural bureaucrats. One challenge was the housing of the huge collection of French impressionist pictures by Matisse, Monet, Gauguin and Derain, bought before the revolution by two millionaire merchants from Moscow, Sergei Shchokin and Ivan Morozov. They were expropriated by the Soviet government under Lenin and housed in the State Museum of Modern Western Art. The museum was disbanded by Stalin in 1948 as the Cold War grew and the pictures were divided up between the Pushkin Museum and the Hermitage in Leningrad.
In 1947 she married a fellow Jew and art historian, Yevsei Rotenberg (d2011) and they had a son in 1954.
In 1961 Antonova was given a huge boost by Khrushchev’s culture minister, Yekaterina Furtseva, whose force of character matched her own. Antonova was appointed the Pushkin Museum’s Director. She loved organising an exhibition of 100 paintings from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in N.Y and the exhibition Treasures of Tutankhamen.
Working as a nurse, she returned to Moscow Uni and on graduation in 1945, joined the staff of Moscow’s Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts where she spent many decades. One of her first jobs was to help in storing art collections taken from Germany by the victorious Red Army. They included a hoard of golden crowns and jewellery excavated by Heinrich Schliemann in Troy, as well as 700+ pictures from the Dresden Gallery in East Germany. The Dresden pieces were returned in 1955. The Trojan works remain in Moscow.
Thanks to her Bolshevik father, Irina had a history that made it easier for her to negotiate with Soviet cultural bureaucrats. One challenge was the housing of the huge collection of French impressionist pictures by Matisse, Monet, Gauguin and Derain, bought before the revolution by two millionaire merchants from Moscow, Sergei Shchokin and Ivan Morozov. They were expropriated by the Soviet government under Lenin and housed in the State Museum of Modern Western Art. The museum was disbanded by Stalin in 1948 as the Cold War grew and the pictures were divided up between the Pushkin Museum and the Hermitage in Leningrad.
In 1947 she married a fellow Jew and art historian, Yevsei Rotenberg (d2011) and they had a son in 1954.
In 1961 Antonova was given a huge boost by Khrushchev’s culture minister, Yekaterina Furtseva, whose force of character matched her own. Antonova was appointed the Pushkin Museum’s Director. She loved organising an exhibition of 100 paintings from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in N.Y and the exhibition Treasures of Tutankhamen.
Cezanne and Gauguin exhibition
As Director, Irina was a passionate exponent of the close links between Russian and Western European culture. She expanded the museum’s display of Impressionist and Modernist art works, many of which had been kept hidden in vaults by earlier directors. Pushing against Soviet political orthodoxy, she collaborated with museums in Berlin and Paris to put on exhibitions that showed how Russian and European artists influenced each other.
And she ensured that the Pushkin Museum exhibited abstract and avant-garde works by Russian and international artists. That was improbable in a country whose leader Nikita Khrushchev, while visiting an exhibition of new Soviet art in 1962, shouted abuse about abstract paintings!!
Irina’s greatest pleasure was when she brought the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in Paris in 1974. Hundreds of thousands of Russians lined up to see it!
Her position made her one of the Soviet Union’s leading public intellectuals and often took her abroad to gatherings of other world-famous museum directors. In Paris she got to know Marc Chagall (1887-1985) after the director of the Louvre introduced them. She fought hard to hold an exhibition of Chagall’s work in Moscow, but it was only under Mikhail Gorbachev’s more liberal regime that it was finally held, after Chagall’s death.
In 1981 Pushkin Museum hosted Moscow-Paris 1900-1930, a major exhibition that mixed works by French artists eg Matisse and Picasso with works of the Russian avant-garde eg Chagall, Malevich and Kandinsky. The exhibition showed how well Russian artists fitted in with Western European trends, and how they had helped form those trends.
As Director, Irina was a passionate exponent of the close links between Russian and Western European culture. She expanded the museum’s display of Impressionist and Modernist art works, many of which had been kept hidden in vaults by earlier directors. Pushing against Soviet political orthodoxy, she collaborated with museums in Berlin and Paris to put on exhibitions that showed how Russian and European artists influenced each other.
And she ensured that the Pushkin Museum exhibited abstract and avant-garde works by Russian and international artists. That was improbable in a country whose leader Nikita Khrushchev, while visiting an exhibition of new Soviet art in 1962, shouted abuse about abstract paintings!!
Irina’s greatest pleasure was when she brought the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in Paris in 1974. Hundreds of thousands of Russians lined up to see it!
Her position made her one of the Soviet Union’s leading public intellectuals and often took her abroad to gatherings of other world-famous museum directors. In Paris she got to know Marc Chagall (1887-1985) after the director of the Louvre introduced them. She fought hard to hold an exhibition of Chagall’s work in Moscow, but it was only under Mikhail Gorbachev’s more liberal regime that it was finally held, after Chagall’s death.
In 1981 Pushkin Museum hosted Moscow-Paris 1900-1930, a major exhibition that mixed works by French artists eg Matisse and Picasso with works of the Russian avant-garde eg Chagall, Malevich and Kandinsky. The exhibition showed how well Russian artists fitted in with Western European trends, and how they had helped form those trends.
Antonova and Chagall, 1973
Her success in charging through a bureaucracy was due to her strong personality and intelligence, coupled with her public expressions of clear loyalty to Soviet ideology. In 1990 she made a keynote speech at the Communist party’s last celebration of the October Revolution.
Antonova gave many public lectures around Europe, speaking fluent German, French and Italian. She felt closer to the art of mainland Europe than to Britain’s, but agreed to hold an exhibition of works by Henry Moore in the Pushkin Museum in 1991. Reactionaries mounted a coup against Gorbachev in Aug 1991, but fortunately the exhibition went ahead.
Following the fall of Communism, Antonova expanded the museum to adjacent buildings to house growing exhibitions. My personal favourite exhibition was Age of Rembrandt and Vermeer: Masterpieces of the Leiden Collection one of the largest collections of C17th Dutch paintings anywhere. By the time the exhibition was displayed in 2018, the Museum’s Director had retired.
Antonova was a leading art historian who led the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow for 50+ years, using it to bring outside culture to passionate Soviet citizens and turning it into a major cultural institution. She died in 2020 at 98, from heart failure then coronavirus. At her funeral, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia President said Irina managed to surmount seemingly insurmountable obstacles. She shared the firm, unshakable and unbiased belief that for the arts’ development there must be a free dialogue between galleries and artists.
What a remarkable woman, I have never heard of her and found the post really interesting
ReplyDeleteWhat a life for this wonderful woman in history of fine arts.
ReplyDeleteHello Hels, Antonova succeeded in both her personal and professional lives against overwhelming odds. She is impressive indeed.
ReplyDelete--Jim
I also found this post very interesting. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteA remarkable lady indeed.
ReplyDeleteAlways learning Hels, good for the mind.
Thank you, dear Helen! It's interesting to learn about Irina Antonova!
ReplyDeleteOne more remarkable woman to remember. Keep them coming.
ReplyDeleteJo-Anne
ReplyDeleteI had already loved Russian art but I hadn't heard of her either, until I read the book 'Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts Moscow'. Irina Antonova wrote an excellent page introduction to the museum, and briefly described the hundreds of full colour plates, one each for the paintings. The best era she focused on was Impressionist: Corot, Manet, Degas, Pissarro, Sisley, Renoir, Cezanne, Monet etc.
Sometimes our best learning comes by accident.
roentare
ReplyDeleteAntonova was not just learned... she was also confident, brave and well connected. Her career could have ended much earlier and in a much more ugly fashioned.
A fascinating insight to a remarkable woman.
ReplyDeleteParnassus
ReplyDeleteSpending decades on the staff of Moscow’s Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts was a wonderful career, especially after the horrors of the World War II. One of her first jobs was to help in storing art collections taken from Germany by the victorious Red Army. Russia had contributed so much to the Allied cause, so can we easily guess the joy when The Dresden pieces were returned in 1955.
From then on, Antonova became more individually respected and much better known in the profession.
Rachel
ReplyDeletemy pleasure. I knew many wonderful women in medicine, science, academe, literature etc but Irina Antonova did something special. She was an art historian, director of a world famous museum, author and exhibition co-ordinator across Europe and Russia.
Margaret
ReplyDeleteEven for those of us who know European history and art history well, there are few courses available regarding Russian, Czech, Polish, Hungarian etc culture. Even later in life *cough*, we still have much pleasure awaiting new learning.
Irina
ReplyDeleteI am very familiar with the paintings of Kandinsky, Lissitzky, Chagall, Malevich, Bakst etc but I had no idea that Antonova collaborated with museums in Berlin and Paris to put on exhibitions that showed how Russian and European artists influenced each other. The connection she created was essential.
Andrew
ReplyDeleteI always hoped Russian society didn't oppress women after the Russian Revolution as much as other nations did. But notwithstanding my grandmother's and mother's stories, it is always very pleasing to read reliable evidence about women's success there.
Fun60
ReplyDeleteNot only did Antonova gave many public lectures around Europe, speaking Russian, German, French and Italian at ease; she connected with the audiences' brains in their own languages. Firstly Renoir, Matisse, Picasso and Cézanne had been considered formalistic and bourgeois artists. Secondly Marc Chagall and Wassily Kandinsky had been regarded as traitors for having left Russia for the West. So Antonova most significant exhibition was “Moscow-Paris” in 1981, with works by Chagall, Kandinsky and other Russian and French artists.
Hi Hels - fascinating information on the Pushkin Museum and its director, Antonova, whom I glad was able to navigate her way through the politics for a while, though I see her daughter has moved away. The East European art inclusive is wonderful and I hope we don't lose it behind the Russian baricades ... also I hope to see some Chagall next week - cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteHilary
ReplyDeleteI can find plenty about Antonova and her husband Yevsei Rotenberg, but so far I cannot find anything about their one son, Boris Rotenberg. But we know that both parents were extremely talented: Yevsei Rothenberg was author of key works on classical art of Western Europe, the head of the sector of the classical art of the Institute of History of Art.
You shared Irina's views exactly on how important it was that East European art be included as an integrated part of European art history.
She had a really interesting life, but her time during the war sounds really tough. She must been a really strong character to do all she can do. And you asked if I had help in my gardens, and the answer is no. I do it all myself. It is a work of love.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great read. A true grande dame.
ReplyDeleteI love people who "love" exhibitions.
And persuading the Louvre to lend the Mona Lisa to the Pushkin. They must have trusted her.
Thanks hels.
Erika
ReplyDeleteI would like to think my colleagues and I are/were as intellectually talented as Irina Antonova in art history and museology, but she was very brave, very focused and internationally skilled. And she worked full time until 2013!
Liam
ReplyDeleteIrina Antonova began work at the Pushkin Museum began under Joseph Stalin and ended under Vladimir Putin. I think the Louvre and other major galleries admired her so much that they really trusted her re taking the Mona Lisa to Moscow. In fact she had already exposed mas-terpieces that had been hidden for decades from Russian citizens, displaying them in her museum!
Well, Antonova has reached the respectable age of 98! May her soul rest in peace!
ReplyDeleteShe's done a lot for culture in general, and for the Pushkin Museum in particular, working under the various leaders of Russia: Stalin, Chruschev, Gurbacev, Putin. Not anyone could have done that, but her love of art overcame anything that might have stood in her way.
DUTA
ReplyDeleteAntonova not only thought that Russian culture was as fine as any on earth, she also believed that Russian citizens should be able to examine and value all of European culture at the same time. Fortunately life improved greatly after Stalin died and she was well supported by Khrushchev and his culture minister, and later by Gorbachev.
I hope her husband and son were also very supportive. A woman over 70 could be easily pushed over without good family support.