
Isaac Ilyich Levitan Painting Reproductions 4 of 6
1860-1900
Russian Peredvizhniki Painter
Born in 1860 into a family of modest means, the artist grew up in an environment charged with intellectual curiosity but limited financial security. His father, a railroad employee, relocated the family to Moscow in the early 1870s in pursuit of a better life. Even from childhood, there was a certain spirited curiosity about landscapes and their fleeting atmospheres that would later characterize his mature oeuvre. That early sense of wonder is subtly recalled in his paintings - the tranquil interplay of sky, water, and terrain speaks to the artist’s lifelong pursuit of translating nature’s moods onto canvas.
In 1873, already following in the footsteps of his brother, he enrolled in the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. Although his studies brought him under the tutelage of renowned figures such as Alexei Savrasov, Vasily Perov, and Vasily Polenov, the young student’s personal circumstances remained dire. By 1877, both of his parents had died, leaving him homeless and frequently starving. In a benevolent gesture, the School’s Committee waived tuition fees, also offering him supplies. Despite these challenges, he distinguished himself with early entries into exhibitions, prompting the art press to note his name for the first time.
As he grew in reputation, he became associated with the Society for Traveling Art Exhibitions (the “Peredvizhniki”), whose shows gave his student works a modest but crucial public platform. During the early 1880s, he began to gather momentum, with well-received landscapes featured in student exhibitions and recognized by influential collectors, including Pavel Tretyakov. While his landscapes garnered attention, his financial struggles meant he often relied on meager stipends or small commissions. He spent summers sketching in the countryside or near the Volga, gradually forging a perceptive approach to mood and weather that remains evident in his most reflective pieces.
By the end of the 1880s, his presence in Russia’s artistic circles had grown. With the support of various patrons and friends - among them Anton Chekhov and leading figures of Moscow’s cultural scene - he traveled to the Crimea, to the Italian coast, and repeatedly to the Volga region. Each sojourn enriched his capacity to capture ephemeral atmospheric effects. Yet behind these achievements lay a fragile constitution. Recurrent illness, coupled with the strain of forced absences due to the restrictions placed on Jewish residents in Moscow, rendered his productivity all the more remarkable. During his frequent travels, he continued to refine compositions that revealed subtle gradations of light, sky, and water, foreshadowing what he considered his crowning expressions of the Russian landscape.
Entering the 1890s, a deepening maturity became evident in his larger compositions, which embodied more layered emotional undertones. Paintings like “Quiet Abode” and “Eternal Peace” emerged during this time and found esteemed buyers, further establishing his standing. Despite bouts of neurasthenia and a serious heart condition, he pressed on, shaping landscapes that evoked the serenity of nature and a hint of introspection. He often worked intensively in the countryside, renting rooms or staying with friends, translating each season’s unique spirit into carefully calibrated palettes. The final years of his life, although fraught with ill health, saw him exhibit both in Russia and abroad, including an invitation to display work with the Munich Secession. In 1900, his health deteriorated decisively, and he died at the age of forty, leaving numerous unfinished works behind. Yet even in that unfinished state, one observes his sure hand at capturing the elusive quality of light.
His burial place eventually lay in the Novodevichy Cemetery, close to the grave of Chekhov, symbolically linking these two figures whose creative paths often intersected. Posthumous exhibitions revealed the breadth of his artistry: around 40 unfinished paintings and hundreds of sketches, each underscoring his commitment to rendering nature’s profound quietude. For all the hardship he endured, his dedication remains clear: a painter who sought to convey the tender interplay between land, sky, and water, revealing the ineffable calm and fleeting grandeur he perceived. His paintings encapsulates not only a refined landscape technique but the very essence of one who overcame adversity to pursue what he felt was a vital truth: that art, like nature, relies on moments of rare, unspoken understanding.
In 1873, already following in the footsteps of his brother, he enrolled in the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. Although his studies brought him under the tutelage of renowned figures such as Alexei Savrasov, Vasily Perov, and Vasily Polenov, the young student’s personal circumstances remained dire. By 1877, both of his parents had died, leaving him homeless and frequently starving. In a benevolent gesture, the School’s Committee waived tuition fees, also offering him supplies. Despite these challenges, he distinguished himself with early entries into exhibitions, prompting the art press to note his name for the first time.
As he grew in reputation, he became associated with the Society for Traveling Art Exhibitions (the “Peredvizhniki”), whose shows gave his student works a modest but crucial public platform. During the early 1880s, he began to gather momentum, with well-received landscapes featured in student exhibitions and recognized by influential collectors, including Pavel Tretyakov. While his landscapes garnered attention, his financial struggles meant he often relied on meager stipends or small commissions. He spent summers sketching in the countryside or near the Volga, gradually forging a perceptive approach to mood and weather that remains evident in his most reflective pieces.
By the end of the 1880s, his presence in Russia’s artistic circles had grown. With the support of various patrons and friends - among them Anton Chekhov and leading figures of Moscow’s cultural scene - he traveled to the Crimea, to the Italian coast, and repeatedly to the Volga region. Each sojourn enriched his capacity to capture ephemeral atmospheric effects. Yet behind these achievements lay a fragile constitution. Recurrent illness, coupled with the strain of forced absences due to the restrictions placed on Jewish residents in Moscow, rendered his productivity all the more remarkable. During his frequent travels, he continued to refine compositions that revealed subtle gradations of light, sky, and water, foreshadowing what he considered his crowning expressions of the Russian landscape.
Entering the 1890s, a deepening maturity became evident in his larger compositions, which embodied more layered emotional undertones. Paintings like “Quiet Abode” and “Eternal Peace” emerged during this time and found esteemed buyers, further establishing his standing. Despite bouts of neurasthenia and a serious heart condition, he pressed on, shaping landscapes that evoked the serenity of nature and a hint of introspection. He often worked intensively in the countryside, renting rooms or staying with friends, translating each season’s unique spirit into carefully calibrated palettes. The final years of his life, although fraught with ill health, saw him exhibit both in Russia and abroad, including an invitation to display work with the Munich Secession. In 1900, his health deteriorated decisively, and he died at the age of forty, leaving numerous unfinished works behind. Yet even in that unfinished state, one observes his sure hand at capturing the elusive quality of light.
His burial place eventually lay in the Novodevichy Cemetery, close to the grave of Chekhov, symbolically linking these two figures whose creative paths often intersected. Posthumous exhibitions revealed the breadth of his artistry: around 40 unfinished paintings and hundreds of sketches, each underscoring his commitment to rendering nature’s profound quietude. For all the hardship he endured, his dedication remains clear: a painter who sought to convey the tender interplay between land, sky, and water, revealing the ineffable calm and fleeting grandeur he perceived. His paintings encapsulates not only a refined landscape technique but the very essence of one who overcame adversity to pursue what he felt was a vital truth: that art, like nature, relies on moments of rare, unspoken understanding.
122 Isaac Levitan Paintings

Lake Como 1894
Oil Painting
$370
$370
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8074
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 15.7 x 21.4 cm
Private Collection
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 15.7 x 21.4 cm
Private Collection

Lake. Grey Day 1895
Oil Painting
$422
$422
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8075
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 47.5 x 57.8 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 47.5 x 57.8 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia

A Crimean Landscape n.d.
Oil Painting
$468
$468
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8076
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 39.4 x 49.5 cm
Private Collection
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 39.4 x 49.5 cm
Private Collection

Autumn Sunny Day c.1897/98
Oil Painting
$351
$351
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8101
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 11.5 x 18.5 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 11.5 x 18.5 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Autumn a.1890
Oil Painting
$575
$575
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8102
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 57 x 76 cm
The Rostov Regional Fine Art Museum, Rostov-on-Don, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 57 x 76 cm
The Rostov Regional Fine Art Museum, Rostov-on-Don, Russia

Autumn. Road to Village 1877
Oil Painting
$541
$541
Canvas Print
$54.72
$54.72
SKU: LEV-8103
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 66 x 44 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 66 x 44 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Autumn. Mill. Reach 1888
Oil Painting
$595
$595
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8104
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 41 x 65 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 41 x 65 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Autumn. River c.1898/99
Oil Painting
$474
$474
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8105
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 32 x 46.5 cm
Private Collection
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 32 x 46.5 cm
Private Collection

Aspen. Grey Day 1884
Oil Painting
$460
$460
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8106
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 38.5 x 27.3 cm
National Art Museum of Belarus, Minsk, Belarus
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 38.5 x 27.3 cm
National Art Museum of Belarus, Minsk, Belarus

The Rests of the Past. Twilight. Finland 1897
Oil Painting
$696
$696
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8107
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 57 x 87 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 57 x 87 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Fern in Wood 1895
Oil Painting
$761
$761
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8108
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 82.2 x 126.2 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 82.2 x 126.2 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia

Apiary 1887
Oil Painting
$404
$404
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8109
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 22.5 x 31.5 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 22.5 x 31.5 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Apiary a.1880
Oil Painting
$408
$408
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8110
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 20.5 x 31 cm
Omsk Regional Museum of Fine Arts M. A. Vrubel, Omsk, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 20.5 x 31 cm
Omsk Regional Museum of Fine Arts M. A. Vrubel, Omsk, Russia

Cloudy Day 1890
Oil Painting
$574
$574
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8111
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 32.4 x 57.3 cm
Kareliya Museum of the Fine Arts, Petrozavodsk, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 32.4 x 57.3 cm
Kareliya Museum of the Fine Arts, Petrozavodsk, Russia

Landscape 1883
Oil Painting
$571
$571
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8112
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 42.5 x 74 cm
The State Memorial Estate "The Rostov Kremlin", Rostov, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 42.5 x 74 cm
The State Memorial Estate "The Rostov Kremlin", Rostov, Russia

Landscape n.d.
Oil Painting
$389
$389
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8113
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 25 x 34.5 cm
Chelyabinsk Region Picture Gallery, Chelyabinsk, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 25 x 34.5 cm
Chelyabinsk Region Picture Gallery, Chelyabinsk, Russia

Landscape n.d.
Oil Painting
$376
$376
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8114
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 31 x 26 cm
The State Central Museum of Musical Culture M. I. Glinka, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 31 x 26 cm
The State Central Museum of Musical Culture M. I. Glinka, Moscow, Russia

Landscape with Steamship c.1888/90
Oil Painting
$349
$349
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8115
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: unknown
Private Collection
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: unknown
Private Collection

The First Greens. May c.1883/88
Oil Painting
$531
$531
Canvas Print
$59.36
$59.36
SKU: LEV-8116
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 42 x 58.7 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 42 x 58.7 cm
The Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia

Before the Storm 1879
Oil Painting
$795
$795
Canvas Print
$57.12
$57.12
SKU: LEV-8117
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 72 x 102 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 72 x 102 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia

Train in Way 1890
Oil Painting
$710
$710
Canvas Print
$64.45
$64.45
SKU: LEV-8118
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 59 x 76 cm
Latvian National Museum of Art, Riga, Latvia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 59 x 76 cm
Latvian National Museum of Art, Riga, Latvia

Late Autumn c.1894/98
Oil Painting
$660
$660
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8119
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 59 x 91 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 59 x 91 cm
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia

Portrait of Panafidin 1891
Oil Painting
$780
$780
Canvas Print
$65.50
$65.50
SKU: LEV-8120
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 88.5 x 71 cm
Regional Art Gallery, Tver, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 88.5 x 71 cm
Regional Art Gallery, Tver, Russia

Wood-Cutting 1898
Oil Painting
$761
$761
Canvas Print
$54.26
$54.26
SKU: LEV-8121
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 68 x 103.5 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia
Isaac Ilyich Levitan
Original Size: 68 x 103.5 cm
The Nizhniy Novgorod Art Museum, Nizhni Novgorod, Russia