Sergey Konstantinovich Zaryanko (Russian: Сергей Константинович Зарянко; 6 October 1818, Lyady – 1 January 1870, Moscow) was a Russian portrait painter and art teacher of Belarusian ancestry.
Biography
He was the son of a serf on the estate of the Lubomirski family. After his father received his freedom, they moved to Saint Petersburg and entered the employ of Alexander Golitsyn, who would later be a government minister. He showed an early aptitude for art and received his first lessons from Vasily Avrorin [ru]. In 1834, thanks to a recommendation from Alexey Venetsianov, he was able to begin auditing classes at the Imperial Academy of Arts.[1]
At first, he painted interiors rather than portraits and studied landscape painting with Maxim Vorobiev. In 1836, he was awarded a silver medal. Two years later, he received the title of "Artist" and was awarded another silver medal in 1841.[2]
In 1843, he was named an "Academician" and went to Moscow, where he became a teacher at the Alexandrov Military Institute [ru] and worked as an icon painter. Beginning in 1846, he also gave classes at the Moscow Palace Architectural School [ru], but soon returned to Saint Petersburg and began doing portraits.[2] In 1849, his paintings of General Pyotr Karlovich Lomnovsky (1798-1860) and the opera singer, Osip Petrov, established his reputation in that field. The following year, his portrait of Fyodor Tolstoy earned him the title of "Professor".[1]
Muratov, Aleksandr M. (2004). Сергей Зарянко (artbook). Мастера живописи (in Russian). Moscow: Belyi Gorod. ISBN5-7793-0829-2. OCLC61497951.
Shestimirov, Aleksandr A. (2004). Забытые имена: русская живопись XIX века (in Russian). Moscow: Belyi gorod. pp. 34–43. ISBN5-7793-0832-2. OCLC315220468.
Smirnov, Georgy V. (1958). "Сергей Константинович Зарянко". In Leonov, Alexei I. (ed.). Русское искусство: очерки о жизни и творчестве художников. Середина девятнадцатого века (in Russian). Moscow: Iskusstvo. pp. 369–387. OCLC174704011.