Boris Grigoriev emigrated from Russia after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, but his homeland never left him. During more than 10 years of life in France and then in the United States, he worked on his large-scale project – illustrations for the novel ‘The Brothers Karamazov’. “This is not Dostoevsky, this is Russia,” the artist once said.
The only time the illustrations appeared in public was in 1933, at an exhibition in New York. Because of the Great Depression in the U.S., a book with drawings by Grigoriev was never published. After that, they ended up in a private collection and didn’t appear in public.
Today, these illustrations can be seen again at the retrospective exhibition of Boris Grigoriev at the Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg, which will last until January 28, 2024.
Here are some of those 58 illustrations. (Read a short summary of the novel here and discover more about the artist in our article here.)
Father Zosima blesses Alyosha
A monastery
Pavel Smerdyakov
The ‘Reeking’ Lizaveta
Katerina Ivanovna and Dmitri Karamazov
Agrafena (‘Grushenka’)
Fyodor Pavlovich Karamazov in his room
Fyodor Pavlovich Karamazov next to the window
Ivan Karamazov and Smerdyakov
The party in Mokroye
Jury in a court
Interrogation of Katerina
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