"The Tide"
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky is the founder of the original tradition of the Russian landscape, inspired by the nature of the coastal Crimea (to which Lev Felixovich Lagorio, Konstantin Fedorovich Bogaevsky, Maximilian Alexandrovich Voloshin and many others also belong). The legacy of I.K. Aivazovsky consists of about six thousand seascapes.
The basis of the artist's manner was an improvisational method: "The Tide", like many paintings by I. K. Aivazovsky, was painted from memory based on a motif found during a morning walk along the seashore, just a few hours after lunch and before the almost instantaneous southern sunset.
The composition is characterized by free clarity; the interpretation of mobile textures (sea water, air, light) is organic; the color is also refined, subordinated to a tempered color scheme.
The painting belongs to the 1870s, a transitional period in the work of Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky from the ornately striking, carefully executed paintings of the forties, fifties and sixties to a more restrained, but at the same time more flexible, rich in pictorial techniques, the late manner of the artist. The works of I.K. Aivazovsky during this period were characterized by a virtuoso shade of blue.
In this painting, the artist chose that soul—stirring moment when the sea is moving towards the viewer, coming from the depths directly at us: the merged mass of water at the horizon, gradually approaching, dissipates into a sparkling variety of ridges, ridges and drops - and suddenly freezes, as if separated from the shore by an invisible border. Parallel silhouettes of a fast—moving sailboat on the waves and a modest gig slowly rolling along the shore develop the theme of the borderland in front of the viewer.: there is a sea swell, and here is the earth's surface. We see something similar in the depths of the landscape, where an expressive horizon line separates the bluish expanse of water and swirling masses of pinkish clouds.
The two-wheeled, walking carriage expresses the ordinary leisurely way of life of old Feodosia. The ship under the French flag is a representative of the big world, so organically connected by the sea with the small homeland of the author of the painting. The distant view is probably the coast of Koktebel with Camel Mountain.