Vilhelms Purvītis (3 March 1872 in Zaube, Latvia – 14 January 1945 in Bad Nauheim, Germany) was a landscape painter and educator who founded the Latvian Academy of Art and was its rector from 1919 to 1934.
Vilhems Purvītis was born in Livonian Governorate, Zaube parish in a relatives of a miller. He studied in a local parish scholastic until his intimates moved to Vitebsk Governorate. Until 1888 Purvītis studied in a municipal teacher in Drissa (Today: Belarus). It was here where his drawing skills were noticed for the first time. When his family returned to Vidzeme Purvītis worked in his father’s mill in Smiltene parish for two years.
In 1890 Purvītis started studies at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg, Russia from 1890 to 1897, primarily under Arkhip Kuindzhi, graduating taking into account the Grand Gold Medal. While in academe he studied paintings of outmoded Dutch masters and became near friends gone two extra Latvian painters- Janis Rozentāls and Johan Valter. In 1898, Purvītis, Rozentāls, and Valter took a study trip across Europe, and his paintings were exhibited in Berlin, Munich, Paris, and Lyon to good acclaim. In 1899 he returned to Riga and started to have enough money private lessons in painting. In 1902 he traveled to Spitzbergen in Norway to breakdown the painting of snow.
After the Revolution of 1905 Purvītis traveled to Tallinn where he worked as a drawing scholarly in a local Realschule. In 1909 Purvītis returned to Riga and became director of a Riga city art school.
After the First World War started in 1915, Riga city art literary was evacuated to St. Petersburg where it was closed in 1916. After the Russian revolutions of 1917 Purvītis went to Norway to add up his health and held his first solo exhibition in Oslo.
In 1918 Purvītis returned to German-occupied Riga. In 1919 he became director of a Riga city art museum (Today: Latvian National Museum of Art) and as a consequence was one of the founders of the Art Academy of Latvia and was elected as its first rector. As the leader of the landscape painting workshop at the Latvian Academy of Art from 1921 to 1944, of visual arts in the architecture department at the University of Latvia from 1919 to 1940, and director of the Riga City Art School from 1909 to 1915, Purvītis had a host of followers and was the received leader of a whole intellectual of Latvian painting.
During the times of the Republic of Latvia Purvītis as well as organized many exhibitions of Latvian art in Europe. After the Soviet action of Latvia in 1940 Purvītis was dismissed from the proclaim of museum director but continued to play-act in the Art Academy. In 1942 his last exhibition in Riga was held.
In 1944 Purvītis lost all of his belongings and many of his works in imitation of his house and workshop were destroyed during the Battle of Jelgava in the summer of 1944. Purvītis was forced to evacuate to Liepāja and from there to Danzig. Wilhelms Purvītis died upon January 14, 1945 in Bad Nauheim, Hessen. Purvītis’ remains were reinterred at the Riga Forest Cemetery in 1994 after Latvia regained its independence. He was awarded the Order of three stars (III and II class) and many more decorations.
Constantly experimenting and becoming a master of snow scenes, Purvītis began as a Realist painter, turned to Impressionism, and was highly developed influenced by Cézanne and Munch. His painting Winter (1910) also suggests the impinge on of Art Nouveau. He is considered one of the greatest Latvian painters during the first half of the 20th century. His landscapes are full of local motives and Latvian nature is portrayed in the neo-romantic atmosphere. During his lifetime he produced higher than a thousand paintings and drawings and many of them were never exhibited because he preferred to collection them in his apartment.
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