Portrait of Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky

Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky Painting Reproductions 1 of 16

1817-1900

Armenian-Russian Romanticism Painter

Ivan Aivazovsky was born in 1817 in the Crimean port city of Feodosia, then part of the Russian Empire, into an Armenian family of modest means but strong cultural identity. Baptized as Hovhannes Aivazian, his early years were shaped as much by the rhythms of a seaside town as by the echoes of an Armenian heritage that would remain central to his worldview and self-perception throughout his life. This convergence of influences - Eastern roots and Russian affiliation - defined his lifelong tension between periphery and empire, provincial solitude and international recognition.

His precocious artistic talents were first nurtured in local schools and later developed under more formal instruction at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg. There, he studied landscape painting under Maxim Vorobiev and later immersed himself in battle scenes under the guidance of Alexander Sauerweid. Graduating with distinction at the age of twenty, Aivazovsky was already showing signs of what would become the hallmarks of his mature style - a strong sense of theatrical composition, a memory-driven approach to nature, and a compelling ability to dramatize light across fluid surfaces.

From 1840 to 1844, Aivazovsky embarked on an extensive journey through Europe, studying in Italy, exhibiting in Paris, and receiving medals from both the Pope and the Académie royale. This period served as both an artistic maturation and a personal transformation: his name was Italianized to “Giovani Aivazovsky,” and his exposure to the grandeur of Western art institutions confirmed his sense of artistic mission. While most Russian artists of his time sought to establish a native school of realism, Aivazovsky positioned himself instead as a cosmopolitan Romantic, aligning more closely with the traditions of Claude Lorrain and J.M.W. Turner than with his Russian contemporaries.

Upon returning to Russia in 1844, he was appointed official painter of the Russian Navy - a role that not only provided institutional support but also reaffirmed his orientation toward seascapes, battles, and naval ceremonies. Although he painted a wide range of subjects, from Armenian themes to historical dramas, his most enduring images came from the sea - not as topographical record, but as allegorical presence. His paintings were rarely plein air; they were acts of memory, of imagination, and of psychological introspection. His brush rendered the sea as stage, metaphor, and spiritual mirror.

The mid-nineteenth century marked both the zenith of Aivazovsky’s fame and the beginning of his marginalization within the Russian critical establishment. His Romanticism, increasingly at odds with the rising Realist movement led by artists such as Kramskoi and Repin, appeared mannered, even archaic, to some critics. Yet his public acclaim never waned. He was admired by emperors and sultans, honored by academies in Florence, Stuttgart, and Paris, and showered with decorations - many of which he would later discard in protest, most notably after the Armenian massacres of the 1890s.

Aivazovsky’s loyalty to the Romantic tradition was unwavering, even when the stylistic currents of the Russian art world drifted elsewhere. He remained in Feodosia, far from the urban centers of artistic discourse, and built a studio, a gallery, and eventually a museum in his native city. This physical and intellectual remove insulated him from new developments but also allowed a singular artistic voice to endure largely unchallenged. His paintings from this later period - often shimmering in silver and blue - demonstrate an increasing preoccupation with solitude and vastness, where human figures appear fragile, even irrelevant, against the grandeur of the natural world.

In addition to his prolific output - some 6,000 works by conservative estimate, possibly more - Aivazovsky also played a civic role in Feodosia, supporting infrastructure projects, establishing an archaeological museum, and even providing clean water to the town. His identity as both provincial and global was never reconciled, but perhaps never meant to be. He traveled to Constantinople, Egypt, America, and Armenia, always returning to the Black Sea as to a point of spiritual origin.

His relationship with his Armenian identity intensified in his later years. His second marriage, to an Armenian widow forty years his junior, brought him closer to his cultural roots. Following the atrocities against Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, Aivazovsky used his art to denounce violence and injustice, casting aside previous honors from the Turkish court with theatrical defiance. It was a rare moment when the private man and the public painter converged in a single act of political protest.

He died in 1900, buried in the courtyard of St. Sargis Armenian Church in Feodosia, beneath a marble sarcophagus inscribed with a line in Classical Armenian: “Born as a mortal, left the immortal memory of himself.” It is an epitaph not of sentiment, but of measure - an acknowledgment of a legacy secured not through revolution, but through consistency, craft, and a singular vision of the sea as an eternal theater of human longing and natural power.

Aivazovsky’s critical legacy remains divided. Admired by some for his technical mastery and evocative seascapes, dismissed by others for a perceived repetitiveness or lack of intellectual engagement, he stands somewhat apart from the trajectory of Russian art. His paintings defy categorization: Romantic in spirit, academic in execution, yet at times disarmingly modern in their abstraction of space and mood. If his art rarely changed, it is perhaps because he found early on a visual language both vast and intimate, and spent a lifetime refining its cadences.

379 Aivazovsky Paintings

The Ninth Wave, 1850 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Ninth Wave 1850

Oil Painting
$1261
Canvas Print
$56.01
SKU: AYV-10
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 221 x 332 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia

Among the Waves, 1898 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Among the Waves 1898

Oil Painting
$1345
Canvas Print
$68.74
SKU: AYV-11
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 285 x 429 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Black Sea, 1881 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Black Sea 1881

Oil Painting
$931
Canvas Print
$99.18
SKU: AYV-12
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 149 x 208 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Ice Mountains in Antarctica, Icebergs, 1870 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Ice Mountains in Antarctica, Icebergs 1870

Oil Painting
$1211
Canvas Print
$68.26
SKU: AYV-13
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 112 x 136 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Battle of Chesma, 25-26 June 1770, 1848 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Battle of Chesma, 25-26 June 1770 1848

Oil Painting
$1659
Canvas Print
$79.59
SKU: AYV-14
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 193 x 183 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

View of Constantinople by Moonlight, 1846 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

View of Constantinople by Moonlight 1846

Oil Painting
$1267
Canvas Print
$55.54
SKU: AYV-15
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 124 x 192 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia

White-Caps on the Coast of the Crimea, 1892 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

White-Caps on the Coast of the Crimea 1892

Oil Painting
$1173
Canvas Print
$55.54
SKU: AYV-16
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 130 x 217 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Rainbow, 1873 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Rainbow 1873

Oil Painting
$1211
Canvas Print
$65.35
SKU: AYV-17
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 102 x 132 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Night. A Blue Wave, 1876 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Night. A Blue Wave 1876

Oil Painting
$837
Canvas Print
$82.95
SKU: AYV-18
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 47 x 64 cm
Private Collection

Ukrainian Landscape at the Moon, 1869 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Ukrainian Landscape at the Moon 1869

Oil Painting
$1144
Canvas Print
$61.98
SKU: AYV-19
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 60 x 82 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

The Volga at Zhigulev Hills, 1887 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Volga at Zhigulev Hills 1887

Oil Painting
$1193
Canvas Print
$81.99
SKU: AYV-20
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 129 x 219.5 cm
Museum of Russian Art, Kiev, Ukraine

The Windjamer, Sailing-Ship, 1859 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Windjamer, Sailing-Ship 1859

Oil Painting
$1173
Canvas Print
$62.14
SKU: AYV-21
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 72.5 x 58 cm
The Odessa Fine Arts Museum, Odessa, Ukraine

View of Feodosia, 1845 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

View of Feodosia 1845

Oil Painting
$1362
SKU: AYV-22
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: unknown
Art Gallery, Yerevan, Armenia

The Vicinities of Yalta at Night, 1866 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Vicinities of Yalta at Night 1866

Oil Painting
$1043
Canvas Print
$55.54
SKU: AYV-23
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 40 x 48 cm
Unknown Location

Shipwreck, 1876 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Shipwreck 1876

Oil Painting
$1286
Canvas Print
$67.95
SKU: AYV-24
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 132 x 170 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Maria in a Gale, 1892 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Maria in a Gale 1892

Oil Painting
$1382
Canvas Print
$55.54
SKU: AYV-25
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 224 x 354 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

Storm in the North Sea, 1865 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Storm in the North Sea 1865

Oil Painting
$1228
Canvas Print
$62.44
SKU: AYV-26
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 269 x 195 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

Storm on the Sea at Night, 1849 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Storm on the Sea at Night 1849

Oil Painting
$950
SKU: AYV-27
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 89 x 106 cm
The Grand Palace at Peterhof, St. Petersburg, Russia

Storm at Cape Aya, 1875 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Storm at Cape Aya 1875

Oil Painting
$1444
Canvas Print
$55.56
SKU: AYV-28
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 215 x 325 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia

Shipwreck, 1864 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Shipwreck 1864

Oil Painting
$1267
Canvas Print
$61.53
SKU: AYV-29
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 58 x 78 cm
Art Gallery, Echmiadzin, Armenia

The Battle in the Straits of Chios, 24 June 1770, 1848 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Battle in the Straits of Chios, 24 June 1770 1848

Oil Painting
$1792
Canvas Print
$79.74
SKU: AYV-30
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 220 x 190 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Battle of Navarino, 20th October 1827, 1846 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Battle of Navarino, 20th October 1827 1846

Oil Painting
$1812
Canvas Print
$57.85
SKU: AYV-31
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 172 x 234 cm
Naval Engineering Academy, St. Petersburg, Russia

Storm in Arctic Ocean, 1864 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

Storm in Arctic Ocean 1864

Oil Painting
$1211
Canvas Print
$60.14
SKU: AYV-32
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 209.5 x 151.5 cm
I. K. Aivazovsky Museum, Feodosia, Ukraine

The Bay of Naples, 1841 by Aivazovsky | Painting Reproduction

The Bay of Naples 1841

Oil Painting
$1043
Canvas Print
$55.56
SKU: AYV-33
Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky
Original Size: 73 x 108 cm
The Grand Palace at Peterhof, St. Petersburg, Russia

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