Explore "Three crosses (White crosses)" a canvas of courage

Jāzeps Grosvalds. 1917

Three Crosses (White Crosses) (1917) by Jāzeps GrosvaldsLatvian National Museum of Art

Artist

Jāzeps Grosvalds (1891–1920) was a multi-faceted personality of outstanding talent. He was an aesthete and dandy, in whose arsenal of creative expression visual art harmoniously co-existed with his passion for music and literature.

Europe

His carefree life in the most fashionable cities of Europe was interrupted by the outbreak of World War I.

War refugees

In 1915, Jāzeps Grosvalds started painting a cycle of watercolours dedicated to Latvian war refugees. 

Russian empire

Meanwhile in 1916, himself mobilised in the army of the Russian Empire, he transformed his own experiences into depictions of the everyday life of the Latvian riflemen.

Three crosses

In the work Three Crosses everything that is shown points to the horrors of war – the threatening clouds, the destroyed landscape, the hills depicted in a restrained colour scheme and the silhouettes of the riflemen.

Composition

The figures in the foreground and the horse harnessed to the cart are as though frozen, momentarily joining together in mourning. 

Colour contrasts

Their gazes are directed towards the ruins of the building and the three white crosses that stand out against the background of the black sky, heightening the dramatic colour contrasts and reminding of death.

Poetic manner

The artist witnessed the everyday life of soldiers at first hand, yet depicted what he saw in poetic rather than literal manner, expressing the poignancy of the era through contemporary visual means.

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