"The Knight at the crossroads"
The plot of the painting, related to the Russian epic "Ilya Muromets and the Robbers", fascinated the artist back in the early 1870s, as can be seen from Vasnetsov's sketches. In its final form, the composition was first performed for the VI Traveling Exhibition in 1878. Thus, "The Knight ..." is the first great work by V. M. Vasnetsov on the epic theme.
The painting from the sixth Mobile was also presented at the first exhibition of the Union of Russian Artists in 1903, and soon after it was sold to a collector from the USA. In early 2013, she was supposed to participate in the auction of the London auction house Mac Dougall's; message dated February 21, 2013, 8:45 a.m. In general, up to ten author's versions of this composition are known, and among them the painting of 1882 in the State Russian Museum is especially famous. If at the VI Traveling Exhibition the figure of the horseman was presented in a three-quarter, left turn, facing the viewer, then in the Serpukhov version the Knight is already in profile, and in the painting from the Russian Museum he will be facing the viewer with his back.
The general logic of Vasnetsov's idea is that the artist gradually "immerses" the viewer in the narrative; having "depersonalized" his hero in the end, he thereby forced the "participation effect": so that we no longer look at the hero, but at the world of the painting, through the eyes of this hero.
The popular name "Knight at the Crossroads" is not copyrighted. V. M. Vasnetsov himself defined his plot with the words "A Knight in thought before a straight road" (in a letter to Pavel Petrovich Chistyakov dated April 25, 1882). There is no crossroads or choice of one of the three roads in most of the repetitions of his painting. The dramatic situation of the borderlands is shown: the hero found himself on the edge of an alien, unknown, disastrous "wild field" and must now overcome this milestone. If in the early version of the painting the inscription on the stone repeated the epic text in its entirety: "To the right, go to be married, to the left, go to be rich...", then later (as here) the artist left only the terrible ending: "How straight I go — I don't live, there is no way for either passer-by or passer-by, not a flyby."
The theme of the tense, fateful choice of a direct path in this version is reinforced by the "Hamlet dialogue": the profile of the Knight is directed directly at the human skull lying next to the boundary stone. The muted colors of twilight enhance the mood of anxiety, but the figure of the white "triumphant" horse can also be read against this background as a harbinger of the coming victory of the hero of the picture.