This article analyses L. A. Shvartsman’s illustrations of A. Grin’s stories The Life of Gnor and Ships in Liss. Grin’s romanticism, rejected in the 1930s, resonated with the aesthetic explorations of the Thaw era. Shvartsman aligns with a cohort of artists who reflected on Grin’s work in the 1960s; his illustrations not only transpose the text into a visual language but also expand the myth of “Grinland” as a realm inhabited by resilient individuals capable of fighting for love and ideals. In Ships in Liss, the author employs the image of an old-fashioned snuffbox to distinguish Liss from other cities. It is evident to readers that both Grin and his characters may appear somewhat outdated. Significantly, Shvartsman himself identified as a man from another century, strikingly distinct from his contemporaries – a trait that undoubtedly connects him to the early twentieth-century romantic writer. The key themes in Grin’s art, which also resonate with Shvartsman, include tragic idealism, the conflict between dream and reality, timeless chivalric morality, and love demanding heroic sacrifice. The methodology of the study incorporates a comparative analysis of textual and visual elements, alongside an examination of colour symbolism: both Grin and Shvartsman use colours to convey symbolic quests for ideals, tragic fatalism, and solitude. Through a “romantic-poetic lens”, the artist transforms Grin’s narratives into universal metaphors that resonate with the 1960s. According to Shvartsman, the illustrations are more reminiscent of theatrical sketches, which is emphasised by a distorted horizon line and perspective. Shvartsman achieves two objectives: precise visualisation of specific textual episodes and depiction of a character’s inner life, invisible to others.
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Maria O. Gramatchikova
Quaestio Rossica
Ural Federal University
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Maria O. Gramatchikova (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68de796d5b556a9128e1ae83 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.15826/qr.2025.3.1015